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1753 SKINCARE

Skin Science

Terpenes skin – small molecules, real impact

By Christopher Genberg

Terpenes are not just scent. They are tiny, fat-loving molecules that can shape how a formula feels, behaves, and interacts with the skin’s own chemistry. When they meet cannabinoids, things get interesting for real – not mystical, just smart biochemistry.

Terpenes skin – small molecules, real impact

Why do people talk about terpenes like they’re perfume?

Terpenes are aroma molecules that plants use to communicate, defend themselves, and interact with their environment. In skincare they’re best known for scent, but studies from 2020–2025 also suggest that some terpenes may influence inflammation, oxidative stress, and how compounds move through the outer skin layers.

The key is the mechanism: many terpenes are small and lipophilic, so they may affect trans-barrier transport, meaning passage through the stratum corneum. That does not mean everything gets “absorbed”; it means the formula can behave differently on skin and certain components may work better together.

This is where the entourage effect becomes useful. Not as a buzzword, but as a sensible idea: when cannabinoids and terpenes live in the same botanical environment, they may complement each other instead of acting in isolation. The mainstream problem is that skincare often pushes the skin with harsh cleansing and too many actives, instead of creating conditions where the barrier can actually stay calm.

How to use terpenes wisely

1

Think synergy first

Choose formulas where terpenes are part of the system, not just fragrance on top. A balanced formula can shape how the skin experiences an oil or serum rather than simply smelling strong.

2

Read the ingredient list

Limonene, linalool, and myrcene are common terpenes, but their role depends on the whole formula. One molecule never tells the full story; the skin responds to the full context.

3

Respect the barrier

Skin that is constantly stripped or over-exfoliated becomes more reactive. Then you notice scent molecules and actives more, but not in a good way. Gentle cleansing gives terpenes and cannabinoids room to do their job.

4

Choose calm over sting

If your skin gets red or tight easily, go for formulas that support balance rather than chase a tingling feeling. The science behind terpenes is about influence, not about proving something is happening.

5

Use less, consistently

A thin, steady application often beats a heavy layer. Skin likes consistency, especially when terpenes and cannabinoids are meant to work together over time.

How terpenes and cannabinoids actually work together

How terpenes and cannabinoids actually work together

The interesting part about terpenes on skin is not that they are trendy, but that they can make a formula’s biology feel more layered. Limonene, linalool, and myrcene have been studied for different properties: some are linked to antioxidant activity, others to soothing or barrier-adjacent effects. Paired with cannabinoids, they may contribute to the so-called entourage effect – the idea that the whole can behave more intelligently than each ingredient alone.

Practically, this means choosing products that do not fight the skin’s balance. The ONE brings CBD in a skin-regulating oil base, I LOVE pairs CBG with a calming profile, and Ta-DA serum adds antioxidant support with adaptogens when skin needs protection more than pressure. This is not “more actives for the sake of it”; it is better matching between molecules and skin.

1753 uses phytocannabinoids from certified hemp in safer formulas, where the whole point is the whole formula. If you want to understand terpenes skin in real life, start with a gentle cleanser like Au Naturel Makeup Remover, follow with a balanced cannabinoid formula, and let your skin stop defending itself against its own routine.

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Frequently asked questions

What are terpenes in skincare?

Terpenes are plant-derived aroma molecules that can also influence how a formula behaves on the skin. They are not just fragrance; they can interact with other ingredients in a product.

Are limonene and linalool always good for skin?

No, not always. They are interesting molecules, but in high or unbalanced exposure they can irritate sensitive skin. That is why the whole formula matters more than a single trendy ingredient.

What does entourage effect mean?

It refers to cannabinoids and terpenes potentially working better together than alone. In skincare, it is a useful model for how botanical components may interact in a well-built formula.

Can terpenes pass through the skin?

Some terpenes can influence trans-barrier transport because they are small and lipophilic. That does not mean everything goes deep, but it can affect how compounds move and feel on skin.

Let your skin work smarter

Choose calm formulas where terpenes and cannabinoids can cooperate instead of compete.