IOPE Launches Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol at Sephora, Spotlight on Biotech Malassezin and 2026 Skincare Trends

Subject Line: IOPE’s Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol Lands at Sephora (Plus: Biotech “Malassezin” Is Heating Up)


1) Lead Story

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE Launches Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol at Sephora, Spotlight on Biotech Malassezin and 2026 Skincare Trends

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE’s Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol Lands at Sephora (Plus: Biotech “Malassezin” Is Heating Up)


1) Lead Story

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE Launches in the U.S. Marking a Clinical Shift in K-Beauty with Retinoid Technology at Sephora

K-Beauty’s Clinical Era Hits Sephora: IOPE’s Retinoid Tech Lands in the U.S.


1) Lead Story

IOPE officially debuts in the U.S.—and it’s a signal that “K-beauty” is shifting from cute trends to clinical anti-aging.
This week, Amorepacific’s IOPE launched stateside with nine targeted products spanning its XMD, Vitamin C, and PDRN + caffeine lines—anchored by the Retinol RX™ 2% Reti-jection™ Serum ($57), built around the brand’s proprietary retinoid complex designed to balance results with tolerability. It’s available now on Sephora.com, with in-store rollout beginning March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Why it matters: shoppers are craving visible payoff + lower irritation, and established R&D-heavy brands are answering with stabilization tech, barrier-conscious formulas, and clearer “clinical-grade” positioning. If you’re already using prescription-strength retinoids, don’t stack aggressively—more isn’t always better, and irritation can sabotage consistency (and glow). Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining retinoids with exfoliating acids. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider.


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) The “Hypochlorous Acid After-Gym” Wave

Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) facial sprays are trending again as a post-workout, post-mask, “reset” step—especially for people who feel sweat + friction triggers redness or breakouts. Tower 28’s SOS spray remains the reference point (their brand notes years spent stabilizing HOCl and optimizing pH/concentration for facial skin). (tower28beauty.com)
Use it smart: let it fully air-dry before layering, and be cautious pairing it with strong actives (retinoids/acids) unless a pro okays it. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment and always patch test new products before full application.

B) “Minimal Routine” Glow Content Is Winning

Beauty TikTok in the U.S. is currently leaning toward routine-minimizing, skincare-first glow aesthetics—less 12-step layering, more “what actually moves the needle.” Expect content focused on: sunscreen consistency, barrier support, and one hero active at a time. (theshortmedia.com)
The practical upside: fewer product conflicts, easier troubleshooting, and often better adherence. The caution: “minimal” shouldn’t mean under-protecting—daily broad-spectrum SPF is still the cornerstone of youthful-looking skin.

C) Sephora’s SEPHORiA 2026 = Trend Forecasting IRL

If you track innovation like a sport, SEPHORiA returns to Los Angeles March 20–21, 2026, promising “product drops,” master classes, and access to “breaking beauty news.” (newsroom.sephora.com)
Translation: brands often use moments like this to test what will dominate the next quarter—think new textures, new delivery systems, and the next wave of “skin-enhancing” makeup for real-life radiance (not just ring-light radiance).

D) Biotech Antioxidants Get the Spotlight

“Next-gen antioxidant” talk is trending as more shoppers look beyond classic vitamin C—especially if they’re sensitive. Mother Science’s Sephora partnership has amplified interest in malassezin as a gentler, science-forward antioxidant story. (playbookofbeauty.com)
Reality check: antioxidants can be supportive, but they’re not a substitute for sunscreen, and results depend on formula stability, your routine, and your skin’s tolerance. Individual results may vary.


3) Science Corner

Retinoids: “More %” isn’t automatically “more results.”
Retinoids remain one of the most evidence-supported topical categories for improving the appearance of photoaging (fine lines, uneven tone, texture)—but irritation risk rises with strength and frequency. Brand-new launches emphasizing “retinoid complex” and “reduced irritation” reflect a bigger truth: consistency beats intensity for many people. (apgroup.com)

If you’re upgrading retinoids, consider a slow-ramp plan (2–3 nights/week → increase as tolerated), buffer with moisturizer if needed, and avoid piling on strong acids in the same session unless advised. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. And yes—always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only.


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “What I’d Actually Buy From IOPE at Sephora (Retinoid + Barrier Picks)”
With IOPE newly accessible in the U.S., creators are rushing to “first impressions”—but the best videos right now are the ones that read the ingredient lists on-camera, explain retinoid placement in a routine, and compare irritation-mitigation strategies (buffering, alternating nights, and SPF discipline). (apgroup.com)

Look for a video that:

  • distinguishes “retinol complex” marketing from practical use (frequency, pairing, patience)
  • discusses who should not start strong retinoids immediately (barrier damage, active dermatitis)
  • repeats the basics: patch testing, sun protection, and realistic timelines

Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only.


5) Quick Tips

  • Apply retinoids to fully dry skin to reduce irritation; moisturizer after if you’re sensitive.
  • For “glow” that lasts: prioritize daily broad-spectrum SPF, then add antioxidants/retinoids.
  • If you introduce a new active, change one variable at a time for 2 weeks.
  • Keep a “calm kit” ready: bland cleanser + moisturizer + SPF for reset weeks.
  • Always patch test new products before full application (especially acids, retinoids, fragranced products).

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ 2% Reti-jection™ Serum — $57
IOPE’s U.S. launch brings a clinical-leaning K-beauty lineup to a major retailer, led by its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti-jection™ Serum and additional targeted collections (including Vitamin C and PDRN + caffeine). Available now online at Sephora, with in-store availability beginning March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)
Price point: mid-range prestige. Availability: authorized retailers reduce counterfeit risk—buying through Sephora/brand channels is the safest path. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment.


7) Before You Buy

A “2%” retinoid claim can mean different things depending on the type of retinoid, delivery system, and supporting formula. If you’re new to retinoids or barrier-compromised, start lower/slower and don’t judge results at 2 weeks—irritation can masquerade as “it’s working.” Individual results may vary. Always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: the smartest way to build a “glow routine” for spring (hydration + pigment support + SPF), plus what’s worth watching from the SEPHORiA 2026 hype cycle as the event weekend approaches. (newsroom.sephora.com)


Disclaimer (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Skincare and beauty products can cause irritation, allergic reactions, or other adverse effects. Always patch test new products before full application. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or if you have a skin condition, concerns about ingredients, or persistent irritation. Individual results may vary. If you are pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids and strong acids). Purchase from authorized retailers when possible to reduce the risk of counterfeit products. No content above should be interpreted as an endorsement or guarantee of results.

IOPE Launches Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol at Sephora, Spotlight on Biotech Malassezin and 2026 Skincare Trends

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Subject Line: IOPE’s Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol Lands at Sephora (Plus: Biotech “Malassezin” Is Heating Up)


1) Lead Story

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.

DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE Launches Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol at Sephora, Spotlight on Biotech Malassezin and 2026 Skincare Trends

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Subject Line: IOPE’s Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol Lands at Sephora (Plus: Biotech “Malassezin” Is Heating Up)


1) Lead Story

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)

Links:
– IOPE launch details (Amorepacific) (apgroup.com)
– IOPE at Sephora coverage (bustle.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE Launches Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol at Sephora, Spotlight on Biotech Malassezin and 2026 Skincare Trends

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Subject Line: IOPE’s Clinical-Grade K-Beauty Retinol Lands at Sephora (Plus: Biotech “Malassezin” Is Heating Up)


1) Lead Story

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

IOPE officially дебuts in the U.S. at Sephora—bringing “clinical-grade” K-beauty retinoid tech stateside.
Amorepacific’s anti-aging powerhouse IOPE launched in the U.S. online and is scheduled to arrive in Sephora stores nationwide March 13, 2026, with nine products spanning retinol, vitamin C, and PDRN-focused lines. (apgroup.com) This matters because it signals a continued shift toward stabilized, efficacy-forward retinoid delivery—the area where many routines succeed (or fail) based on tolerability. IOPE’s hero callout is its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum (listed at $57), positioned to “optimize efficacy while reducing irritation.” (apgroup.com)

If you’ve been retinoid-curious but hesitant, launches like this also expand the “middle ground” between gentle cosmetic retinols and prescription retinoids. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have rosacea, eczema, or are combining multiple actives. Always patch test new products before full application—and remember, individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (apgroup.com)


2) Trending Now (4 items)

A) Biotech “Malassezin” goes mainstream at Sephora

Biotech brand Mother Science has landed at Sephora with products featuring its patented antioxidant malassezin—a notable example of the industry’s pivot toward ingredient ownership + lab-backed claims rather than “mystery blends.” (playbookofbeauty.com) If hyperpigmentation and post-acne marks are on your radar, this is a trend to watch—just keep expectations realistic and introduce one new active at a time. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only. (playbookofbeauty.com)

Links: Mother Science at Sephora (launch coverage) (playbookofbeauty.com)

B) PDRN keeps rising (K-beauty’s “regenerative” obsession)

Allure flags PDRN (often associated with salmon-DNA–derived or “skin-repair” positioning) as a continuing 2026 K-beauty trend—alongside a broader return to barrier-first routines. (allure.com) The smart take: treat PDRN as a “supporting actor” (soothing/barrier focus) rather than a replacement for essentials like sunscreen and retinoids. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using new actives or heavily treated formulas. This information is for educational purposes only. (allure.com)

Links: K-beauty trends for 2026 (allure.com)

C) “Micro-slugging” (selective occlusion) is still everywhere

The more practical evolution of slugging is micro‑slugging: using a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised areas (think: corners of nose, dry patches) instead of coating the entire face. Dermatology-facing literature has discussed TikTok trends like slugging/skin cycling and where they fit (or don’t) with skin physiology. (dermrefoundation.org) If you’re acne-prone, full-face occlusion may backfire—so go targeted, and avoid doing this over strong exfoliants. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (dermrefoundation.org)

D) Sephora’s “beauty multiverse” moment: SEPHORiA 2026 (innovation radar)

If you track trends early, SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles runs March 20–21, 2026, and is often where brand storytelling and “next big things” cluster—devices, biotech, and new textures included. (newsroom.sephora.com) Even if you’re not going, watch creator recaps for what repeatedly shows up (that repetition is usually a signal). This information is for educational purposes only. (newsroom.sephora.com)


3) Science Corner

Non-negotiable anti-aging science: daily sunscreen + correct use. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and reapplying every two hours (and more often if swimming/sweating). (assets.ctfassets.net) This is the backbone of maintaining more even tone, fewer dark spots, and smoother-looking texture—because UV drives visible photoaging.

If you’re layering actives (retinoids, acids, vitamin C), sunscreen becomes even more important for minimizing irritation and protecting results. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re managing melasma, rosacea, or using prescription retinoids. And yes: always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before starting retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (assets.ctfassets.net)


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinoids Explained: How Dermatologists Actually Use Them (And Why Most People Get It Wrong)” (The Skin Real — Dr. Mary Alice Mina) (theskinreal.com)
If your retinoid journey has ever felt like “my skin is either fine or on fire,” this episode is worth your time. It focuses on choosing the right retinoid for your skin (not your age), avoiding common mistakes, and building a routine that doesn’t collapse your barrier. (theskinreal.com)

Use it as a framework before you jump into new launches (hello, IOPE) so you can interpret marketing claims through a practical, derm-guided lens. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and if you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (theskinreal.com)


5) Quick Tips

  • Retinoid tolerance hack: apply to fully dry skin, start 2 nights/week, then increase slowly if calm.
  • Buffer smart: moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer if you’re sensitive (not “weak,” just strategic).
  • Sunscreen upgrade: choose broad-spectrum SPF 30+ and set a reapply reminder for outdoor days. (assets.ctfassets.net)
  • Patch test rule: try new actives on a small jaw/neck area for several days before full-face.
  • Pregnancy/nursing: avoid starting retinoids unless your clinician okays it—speak with your healthcare provider.

6) New Product Alert

IOPE at Sephora (U.S. debut): Retinol RX™ line + more
IOPE’s U.S. launch includes multiple targeted products, with standout attention on its Retinol RX™ 2% Reti‑Jection™ Serum ($57) and other retinol-based options positioned around performance-with-tolerability. Available now online at Sephora and expected in Sephora stores March 13, 2026. (apgroup.com)

Price point & availability: Mid-range prestige (roughly $6.50–$69 across the launch assortment, per coverage), making it easier to test-drive without going full luxury. Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only. (shopping.yahoo.com)


7) Before You Buy

Before you “level up” to higher-strength retinoids, audit your barrier basics. If you aren’t consistently using SPF 30+ and a simple moisturizer, adding a strong retinoid may just create irritation (and force you to quit). (assets.ctfassets.net) Compare not only % claims, but also texture, fragrance, and how many other actives you’re already using. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. This information is for educational purposes only.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: PDRN vs peptides vs “exosome-inspired” skincare—what’s actually evidence-based, what’s just branding, and how to build a routine that’s age-positive and realistic.
Reply with what you’re optimizing right now (spots, firmness, pores, redness, dryness), and we’ll tailor the next roundup.


DISCLAIMER (Mandatory)
This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing your skincare routine—especially if you have a medical skin condition, take prescription medications, or are considering in-office procedures. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or starting new treatments. Purchase skincare from authorized retailers to help avoid counterfeit products.

Exosome-Delivered Retinal Innovation and the Rise of Targeted Micro-Slugging in Skincare

Subject Line: Exosome-Delivered Retinal Is Making Waves + The “Micro‑Slugging” Comeback

1) Lead Story

Retinoids, upgraded: “exosome-delivered” retinal claims big results with low irritation—here’s what to know.
A buzzy headline this week comes from HYDRINITY, which announced clinical results in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology for a retinal (retinaldehyde) formula delivered via a biomimetic exosome system, reporting visible improvement in photodamaged skin with no product-related irritation reported in the announcement. (prnewswire.com) Dermatology researchers have also been actively reviewing exosomes in dermatology and aesthetics, but the broader scientific conversation still emphasizes that product-to-product exosome quality, sourcing, and clinical validation vary widely. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)

Why it matters: retinal is already a favorite “middle ground” retinoid (often effective yet more tolerable than prescription retinoic acid), and delivery technology is the next frontier—aiming for stronger results with fewer barrier disruptions. Still, treat big claims as “promising, not proven for everyone.” Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re using prescription retinoids, acids, or have rosacea/eczema. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only.


2) Trending Now

A) “Micro‑slugging” replaces full-face slugging

Slugging never fully died—but the 2026 vibe is targeted occlusion: applying a tiny amount of petrolatum only on compromised zones (think corners of the nose, under-eye orbital bone—not lash line, or flaky patches), instead of coating the entire face. Editors and derm-led commentary continue to frame it as barrier support, not a cure-all. If you’re acne-prone, keep it zone-only and avoid trapping heavy layers over active breakouts. (net-a-porter.com)
Reminder: Always patch test new products before full application, and consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment.

B) Skin cycling stays popular—now more “barrier-first”

The classic four-night rhythm (exfoliation → retinoid → recovery → recovery) remains a go-to for people who want results without constant irritation. The most useful evolution: treating the schedule as flexible—if your barrier feels tight, stings, or flakes, add recovery nights and simplify. This trend persists because it’s practical and easy to follow for busy routines. (vogue.com)
If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider—especially before retinoids.

C) Beauty tech: next-gen masks and “longevity” positioning

At CES 2026, L’Oréal previewed an ultra-thin flexible LED mask concept using red and near‑infrared light, with the U.S. launch subject to FDA 510(k) process. (loreal.com) Meanwhile, Shark Beauty also publicized its CryoGlow LED mask with FDA clearance language in a company release. (s202.q4cdn.com) The trend: at‑home devices leaning harder into clinical framing, though real-world outcomes still depend on consistency, correct wavelengths, and realistic expectations.

D) Retail radar: derm-loved brands expanding access

Science-forward skincare is getting easier to buy from authorized retailers. DRMTLGY announced a launch at Ulta Beauty (including its Needle-less Growth Factor Serum). (gcimagazine.com) For trend-watchers, this matters because broader distribution usually means better transparency, easier returns, and fewer counterfeit risks. As always: buy from authorized retailers when possible to avoid fakes—especially for vitamin C, retinoids, and growth-factor style serums.


3) Science Corner

Ingredient spotlight: Bakuchiol—promising, but not a 1:1 retinoid substitute.
Bakuchiol is often marketed as a “natural retinol alternative.” A small randomized, double-blind 12‑week trial compared bakuchiol 0.5% (twice daily) to retinol 0.5% (daily) for facial photoaging outcomes, supporting that bakuchiol may improve signs of photoaging with potentially better tolerability for some users. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)

Reality check: the evidence base is still much smaller than for classic retinoids (retinol/retinal/tretinoin/adapalene), so consider bakuchiol an option for the “sensitive but consistent” crowd—not automatically “better.” Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider (retinoids are commonly avoided; bakuchiol is often discussed as an alternative, but your clinician should guide you). This information is for educational purposes only.


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “Retinol Sandwich / Buffering” (derm-led technique) — for smoother retinoid onboarding
If you’re trying to use retinoids without the dreaded redness/flaking cycle, look for a dermatologist-created retinol buffering/sandwich tutorial (moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer). The core idea: reduce irritation while your skin acclimates—especially helpful for dry, mature, or reactive skin types. Some derm sources note that heavy “full sandwiching” can reduce potency, so you can start buffered and gradually move toward direct application as tolerated. (westlakedermatology.com)

Why it’s worth your time: it’s a technique—not a product—so it works across price points. Pair with sunscreen and a bland moisturizer. Always patch test new products before full application. Individual results may vary.


5) Quick Tips

  • Use retinoids on fully dry skin (wait 10–20 minutes after cleansing) to reduce irritation.
  • Try micro‑slugging only on flaky zones; avoid full-face occlusion if you clog easily. (net-a-porter.com)
  • For vitamin C, choose opaque/airless packaging when possible and store away from heat/light.
  • If you add an active (retinoid, AHA/BHA), change only one variable at a time for 2–3 weeks.
  • Daily non-negotiable: broad-spectrum sunscreen (your best “anti-aging active” over time).

6) New Product Alert

Beauty-tech + barrier-forward launches to watch (and how to shop smart):

  • Shark CryoGlow LED mask (brand release highlights FDA clearance and under‑eye cooling). Expect a premium price; availability varies by retailer—purchase from authorized sellers to avoid counterfeits. (s202.q4cdn.com)
  • DRMTLGY at Ulta Beauty brings clinic-style formulas to easier access (online + in-store rollout noted in industry coverage). Mid-range pricing; strong option if you want simpler shopping/returns. (gcimagazine.com)

Before new devices or actives: Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, and always patch test new products before full application. This information is for educational purposes only.


7) Before You Buy

“Exosomes” in skincare: exciting concept, uneven proof.
Exosomes are a real scientific area in dermatology research, but consumer products vary dramatically in sourcing, stability, and clinical validation. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) If a product leans on “exosome” as the main hook, look for: peer-reviewed data, clear ingredient disclosure, and conservative claims. Individual results may vary—and hype is not a substitute for trials.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: LED masks vs. in-office lasers—what actually changes collagen, what’s marketing, and how to choose for your skin tone and sensitivity. Reply with your top concern (fine lines, pigmentation, laxity, acne, redness) to get a tailored reading list.


Disclaimer (Mandatory)

This newsletter is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Skincare and beauty products can cause irritation or allergic reactions. Always patch test new products before full application. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or changing an existing regimen—especially if you have a medical skin condition, are using prescription medications, or are considering procedures/devices. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients (including retinoids) or undergoing cosmetic treatments. Individual results may vary. Purchase through authorized retailers when possible to reduce the risk of counterfeit products.

Biotech Brightening Hits Sephora and the Peptide Moisturizer Debate in 2026 Skincare Trends

Biotech Brightening Hits Sephora + The Peptide Reformulation Everyone’s Debating

1) Lead Story

Biotech brightening is officially mainstream: Mother Science lands at Sephora (online March 4; in stores March 13, 2026). cew.org
This is notable because the brand’s hero storyline centers on malassezin—a microbiome-derived indole that has early, proof-of-concept clinical data for reducing the look of facial hyperpigmentation (including melasma/photodamage) when used topically. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov While the existing human study is small (think “promising, not definitive”), it’s a real signal that ingredient innovation is shifting toward novel molecules with measurable endpoints, not just repackaged classics.

If you’re exploring biotech for uneven tone, treat it like you would any potent active: start slowly, pair with barrier support, and Always patch test new products before full application. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you’re combining brighteners with retinoids, exfoliating acids, or in-office procedures. And remember: Individual results may vary. This information is for educational purposes only.


2) Trending Now

A) “Hero Moisturizer Reformulation” chatter: Charlotte Tilbury’s Magic Cream update

A major conversation driver this week is the reformulated Magic Cream featuring a proprietary multi-peptide complex (Recoverstem™ Peptide) and barrier-supporting additions like ectoin—with fans debating whether the “new” feels identical under makeup. whowhatwear.com If you have reactive skin, remember reformulations can change your tolerance even if the product name is the same—so Always patch test new products before full application and re-check ingredient lists if you’re acne-prone or fragrance-sensitive.

B) “Skin longevity” replaces “quick fixes”

Editors and derm voices are pushing a 2026 theme: simpler routines, consistent sunscreen use, and barrier-first habits that improve long-term outcomes (and adherence). allure.com Translation: fewer chaotic active stacks, more “repeatable basics.” This trend is especially relevant for anyone 35+ who wants glow without chronic low-grade irritation (which can quietly worsen tone and texture).

C) Slugging—still viral, still misunderstood

Occlusion (often petrolatum) can be great for the right skin—especially very dry or compromised-barrier types—but it can backfire for oily/acne-prone routines or when layered over irritating actives. dexerto.com If you’re experimenting, keep it occasional, avoid trapping strong acids/retinoids underneath, and Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment if you’re managing acne, rosacea, or perioral dermatitis.

D) Community pulse: deal-season skincare planning

Beauty communities are actively swapping “what’s worth it” lists and building routine resets around spring promos—especially when it comes to devices and high-ticket actives. reddit.com If you’re shopping, prioritize authorized retailers to reduce counterfeits, and use promos to restock “boring but powerful” staples: sunscreen, gentle cleanser, and a barrier moisturizer.


3) Science Corner

Ingredient spotlight: Niacinamide + Tranexamic Acid for discoloration (with barrier benefits).
If dark spots, melasma, or post-acne marks are your focus, this combo keeps showing up because it can target uneven tone while supporting the skin barrier. A randomized clinical study in melasma compared a multi-ingredient serum including 5% niacinamide + 1% tranexamic acid (plus other components) against 4% hydroquinone pathways and reported improvements, including barrier/hydration outcomes in the non-hydroquinone arm. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Separate clinical literature also supports niacinamide’s role in barrier function and pigmentation appearance over time. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

Safety note: even “gentle” brightening routines can irritate when over-layered. Always patch test new products before full application. And If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using pigment-correcting actives or prescription options. This information is for educational purposes only.


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: Doctorly — “The ULTIMATE Routine for Dark Spots | Hyperpigmentation and Melasma Guide” youtubesummary.com
Why it’s worth your time: it’s structured like a real plan (not a product haul)—covering how to distinguish melasma vs. post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, how to choose evidence-aligned topicals (including tranexamic acid/niacinamide-style routines), and why sunscreen consistency is non-negotiable for preventing rebound discoloration. The pacing is practical for busy schedules, and it emphasizes combining approaches thoughtfully rather than stacking everything at once.

Reminder: bring your exact products and any procedures you’re considering to a professional—Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment. Individual results may vary.


5) Quick Tips

  • If you’re adding a brightening serum, introduce one active at a time for 10–14 days so you can identify irritation triggers.
  • For retinoids/acids: use the “moisturizer buffer” method if you’re dryness-prone, and don’t exfoliate on nights your skin feels tight or stings.
  • Take neck/chest seriously: apply antioxidant or brightening steps down the neck only if tolerated, then seal with moisturizer + SPF.
  • Reapply sunscreen strategically: keep a small SPF in your bag for the “afternoon window” (especially if you sit near windows).
  • Always patch test new products before full application, especially reformulations.

6) New Product Alert

Mother Science launches at Sephora (biotech brightening focus). Available online March 4, 2026 and in ~140 stores starting March 13, 2026 (U.S.). linkedin.com
Why it’s on our radar: it spotlights malassezin, a newer molecule with early clinical signals for hyperpigmentation. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Price point & availability: pricing varies by product; best practice is to purchase via authorized retailers (Sephora) to avoid counterfeits. Start low-and-slow, and Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment if you’re combining with retinoids, peels, or lasers.


7) Before You Buy

Peptide-heavy reformulations vs. proven basics: Peptides can be supportive, but results are often modest and formula-dependent—while sunscreen + retinoids (when tolerated) remain the highest-impact “youthful skin” pillars for most people. If you’re tempted by a newly reformulated luxury moisturizer, treat it as a comfort/finish/experience upgrade first, and a collagen breakthrough second. Individual results may vary, and Always patch test new products before full application. mdpi.com


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: Barrier-first anti-aging—the most effective “minimal routine” templates for dry, oily, and sensitive skin (plus what to stop mixing if you’re stuck in the irritation loop). Reply with your skin type + top concern to get it tailored.


Disclaimer (Mandatory)

This newsletter is for informational and educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified physician, dermatologist, or other healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition or treatment, and before starting or changing any skincare routine. Do not disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read here. Skincare products can cause irritation or allergic reactions—Always patch test new products before full application. Active ingredients (including retinoids and acids) may increase irritation and sun sensitivity; use sunscreen and follow label directions. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients. Individual results may vary. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment.

CES 2026 Beauty Tech Advances: Infrared LED Masks & Trends to Watch

CES 2026 Beauty Tech Is Going Infrared + The LED Mask Race Heats Up

1) Lead Story

L’Oréal is doubling down on “beauty tech” and longevity-facing skincare—this time with light. In a recent CES® 2026-focused update, L’Oréal highlighted development of an ultra-thin LED face mask designed for targeted skincare, with a U.S. launch noted as subject to the FDA 510(k) premarket notification process. (loreal.com)

Why it matters: at-home LED is shifting from “spa-adjacent gadget” to regulated, evidence-informed device category—and big players entering typically raises the bar for safety engineering, fit, and consistency. If you’ve been curious about red light for fine lines, texture, or post-inflammatory redness, this is a signal the category will keep expanding (and competing) fast.

What to do today: if you’re LED-curious, focus on basics—wavelengths (red + near-infrared), realistic dosing, eye protection, and consistency—and be wary of vague “one mask does everything” claims. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment, especially if you have melasma, photosensitivity, or take photosensitizing meds. Individual results may vary.


2) Trending Now (4)

A) PDRN is still everywhere (K-beauty → mainstream)

PDRN (polydeoxyribonucleotide) continues its crossover from clinic buzz to consumer skincare, with major fashion/beauty coverage calling it a key K-beauty trend and predicting even more momentum in 2026. (vogue.com) Online chatter frames it as “repair-first glow,” but the biggest watch-out is expectation management: many formulas that feel instantly better may be delivering hydration + barrier support more than a proven “DNA-level” transformation. Always patch test new products before full application, and if you’re pregnancy-planning, keep your routine conservative. This information is for educational purposes only.

B) “Skin cycling” gets a calmer, barrier-first remix

The newest version of skin cycling on social platforms is less about aggressive actives and more about structured recovery nights—especially as weather + stress + over-exfoliation collide. Esthetics-industry coverage notes how TikTok popularizes routines like cycling, but pros emphasize individualized pacing. (skininc.com) If your skin is stinging, flushing, or flaking, the trend worth copying is the boring one: fewer steps, fewer acids, more consistency.

C) Sunscreen drop worth watching: Peach & Lily enters SPF

Peach & Lily founder Alicia Yoon discussed the brand’s fresh sunscreen launch—an uncommon move to debut both chemical and mineral options at once (Beam Blocker Invisible Sunscreen and Sun Cover Mineral Sunscreen). (forbes.com) Translation: expect “skincare-like” textures and a glow-forward finish, with the real test being reapplication wear and sensitivity compatibility. If you’re acne-prone or melasma-prone, consistency beats perfection: pick the SPF you’ll truly wear daily.

D) The “consumer-in-the-lab” influencer brand era

A March 6 launch getting buzz: Leaked Labs, positioned as an experiment in bringing audiences into the R&D conversation from day one. (viewthevibe.com) Trend takeaway: community-driven development can be great for shade range, accessibility, and transparency—but don’t let “we built it together” replace ingredient scrutiny, stability testing, and irritation risk assessment.


3) Science Corner

Ingredient spotlight: adapalene 0.1% for photoaging—quietly compelling. A randomized controlled trial evaluated adapalene 0.1% cream in female skin aging, tracking wrinkles/pigmentation with established scoring tools. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) While tretinoin has the reputation, adapalene may be an accessible option for some routines (often better tolerated). The smart approach: start low-frequency (2–3 nights/week), moisturize strategically, and protect your barrier. Expect dryness early; that doesn’t mean it’s “working,” it means your skin is adjusting.

Safety note: If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider—professional guidance is typically cautious with retinoids in pregnancy, and the AAD advises avoiding retinoids. (aad.org) Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment.


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: “The science of red light masks” — Lab Muffin Beauty Science (labmuffin.com)
Why it’s worth your time: it’s a rare, hype-resistant explainer that helps you think like a skeptic—mechanisms, realistic outcomes, and what “dosage” actually means for at-home LED. This is especially useful if you’re seeing influencer routines that imply overnight tightening or pore erasure. Use it as a buying framework: confirm wavelength claims, session length, safety features, and whether the brand provides measurable specs rather than vibes.

Reminder: devices can still irritate reactive skin. Always patch test new products before full application (and introduce devices gradually). Individual results may vary.


5) Quick Tips

  • Apply vitamin C on dry skin, then follow with moisturizer + SPF to reduce sting risk.
  • If you use retinoids, buffer with moisturizer and avoid stacking multiple exfoliants the same night.
  • Keep a “barrier rescue” mini routine: gentle cleanser, bland moisturizer, sunscreen—nothing else for 3–7 days.
  • For makeup over texture: press (don’t rub) complexion products and set only where you crease.
  • Buy actives from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk (especially trending K-beauty).

6) New Product Alert

Peach & Lily Beam Blocker Invisible Sunscreen SPF 30 + Sun Cover Mineral Sunscreen SPF 30 are newly launched options positioned as skincare-forward daily SPFs, with the founder noting the heavy testing investment that goes into launching sunscreens. (forbes.com) Expect one to suit “no-white-cast” lovers (chemical) and one to suit sensitivity-leaning routines (mineral), but your finish preference and eye-sting tolerance will decide. Price and availability vary by retailer; shop authorized sellers (brand site/major retailers) to avoid fakes. Always patch test new products before full application.


7) Before You Buy

PDRN creams/serums: treat them like “barrier-support hydrators with a trend halo,” not guaranteed collagen miracles. Some research explores PDRN in dermatologic contexts, but topical cosmetic claims can outpace direct evidence for at-home anti-aging results. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) If you’re paying a premium, compare against proven workhorses (retinoids, sunscreen, antioxidants) first. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow: “Exosomes” in skincare—what’s real, what’s marketing, and how to shop safely (plus the best barrier-repair routines for spring wind + lingering winter dryness).


Disclaimer (Mandatory)

This newsletter is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Skincare and device responses vary by individual; individual results may vary. Consult with a dermatologist or other qualified healthcare professional before starting any new treatment, changing your routine, or using at-home devices—especially if you have a skin condition, take prescription medications, or have a history of sensitivity or pigmentation concerns. Always patch test new products before full application. If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids, acids, or other potent actives. Purchase products from authorized retailers when possible to reduce the risk of counterfeits.

Surgeon-Developed NassifMD® Skincare Launches at Ulta Amid Retinal Skincare Trend Boom

Surgeon-Developed Skincare Hits Ulta + The Retinal (Retinaldehyde) Boom Explained

1) Lead Story

NassifMD® Skincare officially launched on Ulta Beauty Marketplace (March 4, 2026), expanding access to surgeon-developed formulas beyond clinic shelves. (globenewswire.com) This matters because “doctor-founded” isn’t automatically better—but broader retail availability does make it easier to compare ingredient decks, pricing, and real reviews side-by-side with established derm brands.

The launch announcement highlights hero items like Hydro-Screen Serum, Detox Pads, and a Pro Peptide Collagen Serum positioned around firming and barrier support. (globenewswire.com) If you’re peptide-curious, this is a timely moment to evaluate whether your routine needs a hydration/barrier upgrade (often yes) or a true collagen-stimulating workhorse (usually a retinoid + daily sunscreen). “Individual results may vary,” and peptides are a broad category with mixed evidence depending on the specific peptide and formulation.

If you’re tempted to switch everything at once—don’t. “Always patch test new products before full application,” and “Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment,” especially if you’re using prescription retinoids, treating melasma, or managing rosacea/eczema. This information is for educational purposes only. (globenewswire.com)


2) Trending Now

A) Ulta’s 21 Days of Beauty chatter is peaking

Beauty deal communities are already in full “game plan” mode—especially around skincare tools (like LED/microcurrent-style wands) and which “Daily Beauty Steals” are actually worth it. Today’s r/Ulta Week 1 megathread is driving a lot of comparison shopping and routine “rebuild” lists. (reddit.com)
Smart move: use sale moments to restock basics (gentle cleanser, moisturizer, sunscreen), then add only one new active at a time.

B) “Back to basics” skincare is trending—on purpose

A big 2026 theme: advanced formulations built on familiar, proven ingredients (think: retinal/retinoids, upgraded vitamin C, better delivery systems), rather than chasing novelty for novelty’s sake. (allure.com)
Translation: you’ll see more “boring-but-better” launches—and fewer risky hacks. Love that for your barrier.

C) Retinal (retinaldehyde) is having a moment

Retinal is increasingly positioned as the “next step up” from retinol—often framed as effective yet potentially more tolerable than prescription tretinoin for some users. Evidence reviews continue to discuss retinoid “precursors” like retinaldehyde as second-line options when tretinoin isn’t tolerated. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using retinoids.

D) SEPHORiA 2026 in Los Angeles = “product drop” season

Sephora’s SEPHORiA 2026 event (Los Angeles, March 2026) is positioned as a hub for masterclasses and new product drops, which tends to ripple across YouTube “first impressions” and TikTok try-ons. (newsroom.sephora.com)
Expect “what I bought / what’s actually worth it” content to surge this month.


3) Science Corner

Retinoids still lead the anti-photoaging evidence stack. Recent systematic reviews and meta-analyses continue to support tretinoin’s benefits for photodamage and wrinkles, while noting that alternatives (including retinoid precursors like retinaldehyde) can be considered when tretinoin is too irritating. (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)

Also worth knowing: a 2025 network meta-analysis compared multiple topical interventions for facial photoaging and found meaningful improvements for retinoids (with tolerability differences across options). (nature.com)
Practical takeaway: if your goal is “youthful, radiant skin,” prioritize:
1) daily broad-spectrum sunscreen, 2) a retinoid you can tolerate consistently, 3) barrier support (moisturizer), then 4) targeted add-ons (vitamin C, pigment correctors) as needed.

“Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment.” This information is for educational purposes only.


4) Video Spotlight

Watch: GlowLab with Susan Yara — “How to Get Rid of Hyperpigmentation: Dermatologist Tips for Clear, Even Skin” (feat. dermatologist Dr. Heather Woolery-Lloyd). (music.youtube.com)

Why it’s worth your time: hyperpigmentation is one of the most searched “anti-aging adjacent” concerns—because uneven tone can make skin look less radiant even when texture is great. This episode focuses on cause + prevention + realistic routines, with discussion that’s especially relevant for skin of color and for anyone juggling melasma, PIH, or post-acne marks. (music.youtube.com)

Reminder: “Individual results may vary,” and procedures/actives can backfire if misused—“Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment.”


5) Quick Tips

  • Apply actives on dry skin (wait ~5–10 minutes after cleansing) to reduce irritation—especially with retinoids/acids.
  • Use the “moisturizer sandwich” (moisturizer → retinoid → moisturizer) if you’re sensitive or just starting.
  • If you’re introducing vitamin C or exfoliating acids: start 2–3 nights/week, then increase only if calm.
  • “Always patch test new products before full application,” particularly fragrance, acids, and retinoids.
  • Buy from authorized retailers to reduce counterfeit risk—especially for trending serums and SPF.

6) New Product Alert

NassifMD® Skincare is now available via Ulta Beauty Marketplace (launched March 4, 2026). (globenewswire.com) Expect mid-to-premium pricing typical of doctor-founded brands; check Ulta for current price/stock and promos. The launch callout includes items such as Hydro-Screen Serum, Detox Pads, and a Pro Peptide Collagen Serum aimed at firming and hydration. (globenewswire.com)

Availability tip: shop through Ulta directly (or the brand site) to avoid counterfeits. “Always patch test new products before full application.” This information is for educational purposes only.


7) Before You Buy

Peptide products can be great—just don’t let them replace your “core four.” Peptides vary widely, and evidence depends on the specific peptide + delivery system, so treat “collagen peptide serum” claims as may help, not guaranteed. Meanwhile, retinoids have stronger anti-photoaging support in reviews. (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
If your budget is tight, invest first in sunscreen + a tolerable retinoid + moisturizer.


8) Tomorrow’s Teaser

Tomorrow we’re breaking down: “Retinal vs. Retinol vs. Tretinoin—how to pick based on age, sensitivity, and goals” + the best barrier-repair layering order for spring weather. Reply with your skin type (oily/dry/sensitive, acne-prone, melasma/rosacea) and your current routine for a safer, evidence-based optimization plan.


Disclaimer (Mandatory)

This newsletter is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Skincare and beauty information is generalized and may not be appropriate for everyone; individual results may vary. Consult with a dermatologist before starting any new treatment or if you have a skin condition, are using prescription medications, or are considering procedures. Always patch test new products before full application and introduce new products one at a time to monitor irritation or allergy. Use extra caution with active ingredients (including retinoids, acids, and brighteners). If you’re pregnant or nursing, speak with your healthcare provider before using potentially contraindicated ingredients such as retinoids. Purchase from authorized retailers when possible to help avoid counterfeits.