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Facial oil has a bad reputation in oily and combination skin — and it's largely unjustified. The idea that all oils clog pores ignores an important biochemical reality: the comedogenic index of an oil depends on its fatty acid composition, not on it being an oil. Some oils are actively beneficial for oily and acne-prone skin.
The Comedogenic Index: What Really Matters
The comedogenic index measures an oil's potential to block follicles. The determining factors:
- High in oleic acid (omega-9): higher comedogenic potential — coconut oil, high-concentration olive oil
- High in linoleic acid (omega-6): non-comedogenic or very low — rosehip oil, jojoba, argan oil, grape seed oil
- Jojoba: technically a liquid wax, not an oil. Similar structure to human sebum. Non-comedogenic.
The Nourishing Facial Oil combines jojoba, rosehip and squalane — all with low or zero comedogenic index, all with fatty acid profiles appropriate for normal, dry and mature skin.
Nourishing Facial Oil →When and How to Apply
Position in routine: after serum, before cream. The oil creates an occlusive layer that seals the aqueous actives applied before.
Amount: 2–4 drops — no more. Too much oil creates a greasy effect and makes moisturiser application difficult.
Application: press gently with slightly warmed palms — don't rub. This improves penetration.
The Skin Flooding Method (Progressive Hydration)
- HA serum on damp skin
- Moisturiser immediately before the serum fully dries
- 2–3 drops of oil on top — seals the previous layers
For very dry skin or in winter: add the Nourishing Oil as the last night-time step, after the Ceramide Night Cream. The triple layer no single product can replicate.
Ceramide Night Cream →