26 Sep
26Sep

Have you ever gotten to the bottom of an Amazon page's results?
To me, it seems more like a puzzle about what would happen if you traveled to the furthest reaches of the globe or defeated an unbreakable video game. Is the internet down? Does time come to a halt and then flow backwards quickly and ominously? (more info)


We won't find out any time soon, based on Amazon's vast selection size, so put that existential dread to rest. With so many options, the online juggernaut is both the most convenient location to buy items you already enjoy and one of the more difficult places to use its regular discounts to new worthy purchases — like skincare, which can be more costly than it deserves due to beauty industry markups.


I've put together a list of 27 great skincare products that are flying under the radar on Amazon that you should look into the next time you need a vitamin C serum but don't want to spend $100 or more. Hundreds, if not thousands, of five-star reviews may be found for the following cult classics, which you can check out before purchasing.

Ellie Choi, an aspiring makeup artist from Los Angeles, has shared every stage of her skin-care routine on social media, and her tweets have gone viral on Instagram.

 My Instagram explore page is full with reposts of her skin-care thread, with over 20,000 likes on each post. Why? Her skin seems poreless and dewy in the accompanying photos, much like a newborn baby's. Seriously, her skin is as transparent as glass, and she has a natural glow that reminds me of when I'm using a lot of liquid, wet-looking highlighter.

Choi begins her series of tweets by stating that she has combination skin, which has been screenshotted and shared as a slideshow on Instagram. She's "oily in the T-zone and dry around [her] cheeks," according to her. She then moves on to the first step in every effective skin-care routine: cleaning.


Every night, Choi begins by removing her makeup with Neutrogena's Makeup Remover Cleansing Wipes, an Allure editor favorite that we can't get enough of. But she doesn't stop there. (Perhaps that's where you're making a mistake.)

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