Bizarrely, I didn’t immediately fall head over heels for it (don’t worry, a second plot twist will follow shortly). Sure, it was a good face cream. The light texture absorbed quickly and my skin looked decent, but it didn’t exactly wow me. I felt like a thin layer just wasn’t doing much in the moisturizing department—which, apparently, I later learned, isn’t even what The Cream claims to do. It’s more of an overall skin rejuvenator; the brand also sells a Rich Cream for dry skin, with additions like avocado and argan oil to aid with extra hydration. But I began with the original, thinking it’d be enough.
In order to get maximum effectiveness from the active ingredients, I did what a few other friends and makeup artists had advised and skipped all other products, except face wash. The Bader formula is based on TFC8 (Trigger Factor Complex 8), a proprietary cocktail of more than 40 different ingredients, including vitamins and amino acids. It’s meant to encourage regeneration and healing—Professor Bader actually discovered the formula while looking for solutions to help burn survivors heal quicker—and TFC8 is supposed to activate your stem cells, which go to work to repair fine lines, dark spots, and visible pores. I had heard that the ingredients within were enough to replace all other skin care, so I devoted myself to a one-step kind of lifestyle and waited for my skin to start looking like I had just walked out of a spa. And then I waited some more….
“I don’t understand why I’m not being blown away by AB, is something wrong with me?!” I texted a friend. Such was my level of confusion in the face of everyone else’s level of obsession. “I love it,” she told me, delicately choosing not to answer the second part of my question. Something was clearly wrong with me.
I needed to rethink my strategy. In hindsight, after my skin was so used to being sandwiched in so many layers—I was very much an 11-step-skin-care kind of person—it stands to reason that it wouldn’t take kindly to a single-step makeover. After further research, I learned that there was really no need for me to ditch my other products completely. The Augustinus Bader creams are formulated to target a lot of things: fine lines, wrinkles, dehydration, redness, loss of elasticity, and pore size. Theoretically, you can use them alone, as an all-in-one. But the only important part is that TFC8 touches your face first so it can penetrate. What you add on top is entirely up to you.
More investigation led to another epiphany: The brand recommends using The Cream for a full 27 days to reap what everyone calls its “life-changing” benefits. This is roughly the amount of time your body takes to turn over regenerated skin cells.
With this revelation, I entered phase two of my lengthy experiment with fresh determination and a brand-new mindset. I would treat The Cream almost as a serum, applying it immediately after I cleanse and sealing it in with additional layers of moisturizer and oil. (I’m not saying you have to replicate my steps in order for this to work, but as you can undoubtedly tell, I enjoy marinating my face in as many things as possible.)
Immediately I started seeing the effects everyone was talking about. My pores looked more refined, particularly around my nose. My skin tone became perceptibly more even and subtly glowy; my post-breakout dark spots faded faster. My skin texture even felt bouncier and smoother. And with the extra layers of humectants and oil doing the work of keeping every drop of moisture contained, my Augustinus Bader The Cream was free to do its thing of imparting the just-came-from-the-spa complexion of my dreams.
In the end, this emotional journey taught me two things, for which I am very grateful. First, that I am too high-maintenance for a $280 cream (alone). More important, that Augustinus Bader really is worth the hype; my previously 11-step lineup is hovering closer to six these days. And that’s as minimal as it’s ever going to get for me.
Sarah Wu is a writer in Berlin. Follow her on Instagram @say.wu.