Fermentation
Fermentation (cosmetic)
Definition (cosmetic use): In skincare, fermentation is a controlled process used to modify plant materials—often improving cosmetic texture, consistency, and ingredient availability. It’s an ingredient-processing method, not a medical treatment.
What fermentation can do for a cosmetic formula
- Refines texture: Can yield smoother, lighter serums with reliable glide and wear.
- Standardizes composition: Controlled cycles help keep botanical batches consistent for predictable results.
- Pairs with antioxidants: Fermented plant extracts often integrate well with water-phase antioxidant systems.
Layering & routine design
- AM: After calibrated renewal (No. 9), apply a fermented antioxidant serum (UV-R), then peptides (The Advancement), finish with Serum Bioluminelle and sunscreen.
- PM: Cleanse (Oil Dissolution Theory) → eye area (The Eye Serum) → peptide density (Advancement II) → concentrated antioxidant layer (UV-R Concentrate) → finish with Bioluminelle Concentrate.
- Texture logic: Water-light fermented serums first; non-occlusive lipids last.
Used in OUMERE
- UV-R — composed with select botanicals processed via controlled fermentation for consistent potency and glide.
- UV-R Concentrate — concentrates complementary botanicals for a denser nightly layer.
OUMERE ferments certain extracts to standardize performance in a cosmetic context. Products are fragrance-free and designed for predictable layering.
See also
Scientific Note: OUMERE definitions are cosmetic-science references for educational context and routine design. They are not medical advice.