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1753 SKINCARE

Trend

Glass skin – the mirror finish, minus the theatre

By Christopher Genberg

Glass skin sounds simple: dewy, smooth, almost reflective skin. But behind the trend sit smart hydration, genetics, climate and a skin barrier that hasn’t been bullied into submission. Here we break down what actually helps – and what just looks good in a reel.

Glass skin – the mirror finish, minus the theatre

Is glass skin a routine, or just good skin to begin with?

Glass skin comes from Korean beauty, where the goal is often not to strip the skin and attack it, but to keep it calm, supple and even in texture. The mirror-like finish is usually built with multiple thin layers of humectants, light oils and a barrier that isn’t losing water at full speed. That’s why terms like 7-skin method, essence and toning drops keep popping up: they are about layering, not punishment.

But here’s the part people skip: a lot of what reads as glass skin is also genetics, sebum output, age, climate and light. Skin that naturally reflects light evenly will look “better” long before any routine enters the chat. Research on the skin barrier also shows that over-cleansing, too much exfoliation and harsh actives can raise transepidermal water loss, which leaves skin duller, tighter and more reactive – the opposite of that glossy finish.

So no, glass skin is not a moral achievement. It’s a look, and it works best when skin is left intact. If you’ve been chasing glow with acids, scrubs and a constant “clean” feeling, the problem may not be too little product. It may be too much pressure on the barrier. That’s where this trend gets interesting.

How to build glow without wrecking skin

1

Start with barrier care

Think calm first, glow second. If your skin feels tight after cleansing, you’re probably going too hard. Switch to a gentle cleanse and aim for soft, comfortable skin, not that squeaky-clean lie.

2

Use thinner layers

The 7-skin method is not about flooding skin, it’s about stacking light layers. Press in a thin layer, wait a few seconds, and repeat 3–7 times only if your skin actually wants more.

3

Pick a real essence

An essence should add water, not drama. Apply it to damp skin after cleansing and before heavier steps. If it turns sticky or stings, you’ve gone beyond what your skin needs.

4

Respect genetics

Some people naturally have more glow, others more matte skin. Don’t compare yourself to someone with different sebum levels or skin tone – light reflection changes the whole effect of glass skin.

5

Cut the noise

If your routine already includes strong acids, retinoids and multiple actives, scale back. Glass skin rarely improves with more pressure. It usually looks better when you do less, but do it well.

How to actually get glass skin

How to actually get glass skin

If you want glass skin without falling for the hype, don’t start with trend steps – start with the base. Au Naturel Makeup Remover gives you a gentle cleanse that respects the skin’s lipid balance instead of stripping it. That matters more than any essence later on, because a stressed barrier rarely looks glossy in the right way.

Then build on it with the DUO kit, meaning The ONE and I LOVE. Together they deliver a full cannabinoid spectrum in a minimalist routine that helps skin feel calmer, softer and more stable. That is a far smarter starting point than chasing ten toner layers just because it looks impressive on a shelf.

If you want one more step, Ta-DA serum is the natural fit: an antioxidant cocktail with CBG and adaptogens for skin that needs resilience, not more noise. This is the 1753 way in practice: cleanse without damage, anchor the routine with the duo, then add trends only if they truly earn their place. Glass skin becomes a result of barrier health – not a trick.

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Frequently asked questions

Do I need the 7-skin method for glass skin?

No. The 7-skin method is just one way to build hydration in thin layers, and it won’t suit everyone. If your skin gets sticky, shiny or irritated, 1–3 layers are often better than seven.

Are essence and toning drops the same thing?

Not quite. An essence is usually more water-based and focused on hydration, while toning drops are often marketed as an extra step between toner and serum. What matters is how your skin responds, not the label.

Can everyone achieve glass skin?

Everyone can work toward more glow and smoother texture, but not everyone will look the same. Genetics, sebum, pore size and skin tone all matter. The goal should be healthy, calm skin with natural light reflection – not copying someone else’s face.

What’s the biggest mistake?

Doing too much. Over-cleansing, over-exfoliating and stacking too many actives can make skin drier and more reactive. Glass skin usually comes from consistent barrier care, not a maximalist routine.

Sources

  1. Bíró T, Tóth BI, Haskó G, Paus R, Pacher P. The endocannabinoid system of the skin in health and disease. Trends Pharmacol Sci 2009;30(8):411–420.
  2. Prescott SL, Larcombe DL, Logan AC, et al. The skin microbiome: impact of modern environments on skin ecology, barrier integrity, and systemic immune programming. World Allergy Organ J 2017;10(1):29.

Article reviewed by Christopher Genberg, founder of 1753 SKINCARE.

Build glow from the base

Start calm, keep it minimalist and let your skin show what it can handle.