6 things every woman who has worn makeup for 30 years should know about her skin barrier before it stops repairing itself
By 45, the skin barrier is roughly 30 percent thinner than it was at 25. Decades of foundation, concealer, SPF residue, and the makeup removers that strip them off are the slow-burn villain nobody warns you about. These 6 things explain what your face has been quietly absorbing for three decades and what to do before the barrier stops bouncing back.
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"Somewhere around 47 my face stopped looking like mine in photos."
Three decades of cameras, layered makeup, studio lights, and a cotton round at the end of the day. By 47 the redness across my cheekbones wouldn't blend out.
My dermatologist said the barrier had been thinning for years. The only fix was to feed it back. Squalane, murumuru, shea, jojoba, green tea. No retinoids.
That cream didn't exist on the shelf at a price I'd pay. So I built it. Riche Crème, made in USA, with the same five ingredients my aunts in Bari have used for three generations.
Teresa Giudice, Founder, Sempre Skincare
"After 30 years of TV makeup and studio lights, the only thing that helped my face was getting back to five clean ingredients. Riche Crème is the cream I wish I had at 35."
The cream that worked at 35 stopped working because the barrier underneath changed
Estrogen drops. Ceramide production slows with it. The lipid wall that held moisture in and irritants out has been getting thinner since your late thirties.
By 45 the skin you have is not the skin you had at 35, and it does not respond to the same products. The cream that calmed your face a decade ago now sits on top, doing nothing.
Every time you put makeup on and take it off, your barrier loses a little ground
Thirty years of foundation, powder, contour, mascara, brow pencil, and SPF, layered every day, stripped off every night. Each cycle is a small abrasion. None of them matter on their own. All of them add up.
- Foundation residue trapped in pores
- Makeup removers stripping lipids overnight
- SPF chemicals reacting on a thinned barrier
By 45 the cumulative load shows. Visible redness across the cheekbones, foundation that will not sit flat, SPF that stings where it used to sit fine.
After 45, "sensitive" is rarely a skin type. It is a symptom.
The skincare industry has been selling "sensitive skin" products for 20 years. Most "sensitive skin" after 45 is not a skin type. It is a barrier that has been quietly breaking down under decades of foundation, retinol, and harsh cleansers.
Once the barrier is back, the reactivity drops. The fragrance you stopped tolerating sometimes becomes tolerable again. The SPF stops stinging. The redness stops being baseline.
The label says clean. Read the INCI and a different story shows up.
"Natural fragrance" can be up to 14 chemicals the brand never has to name. "Proprietary blend" hides the dose of the active. "Dermatologist tested" tells you a dermatologist tested it, not whether it passed.
- "Fragrance" or "parfum" anywhere on the label
- "Proprietary blend" hiding the dose
- Words ending in -oxynol, -conol, or -silane
Riche Crème has none of those. Five ingredients, all named, all spelled in real English.
Real glow is a barrier signal, not a serum result
Healthy skin reflects light at a specific angle. The barrier is intact, the lipid layer is full, inflammation is low, and the surface bounces light evenly. That is what "glow" actually means.
Most "glow" creams sell shimmer, mica, or a film that catches the light from the surface. It washes off by noon.
The glow Italian women in their 60s carry is the biological version. Fed barrier, calm inflammation, even surface, no shimmer required.
Five ingredients. No retinoids. The barrier rebuilds itself when you stop tearing it down.
Squalane mirrors the lipids your skin stopped producing in your forties. From there, murumuru butter and shea seal them in. Jojoba normalizes the oil production decades of stripping turned off, and green tea brings down the inflammation that 30 years of makeup, lights, and chemicals set off.
That is the entire active list. No retinoids, no acids, no purge. Made in USA. Built by Teresa Giudice at 52, when her own face needed a cream that did not exist on the shelf.
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Verified Buyers
If you have been ignoring the irritation, redness, and sensitivity for years, this is the cream that fixes the cause instead of treating the symptom.