
Ceramides 101: why your skin needs them as you age
Ceramides are the lipid mortar that holds your skin barrier together. Production drops with age. They're one of the few ingredients I'd…
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Category
Know exactly what's in the bottle and why it matters.
Quick answer
The Ingredients library is the most thorough English-language reference for skincare actives we know how to build. Each entry breaks down what an ingredient is, the mechanism by which it works, the clinical evidence behind it, who should and shouldn't use it, and how to layer it without canceling other actives.
Retinol, retinal, tretinoin, bakuchiol — every option, decoded.
Every form of vitamin C — LAA, SAP, MAP, THD, glucoside.
The all-rounder vitamin B3, properly explained.
Signal, carrier, neuropeptides — and which actually work.
The exfoliant family from gentlest to strongest.
Hyaluronic acid, glycerin, polyglutamic acid, beta-glucan.
Barrier-repair lipids the skin actually uses.
Pre/pro/postbiotics, ferments, and biome-friendly botanicals.
PDRN, exosomes, EGF, snail mucin, propolis, galactomyces.
Mineral, chemical, and what's actually FDA-approved in the US.

Ceramides are the lipid mortar that holds your skin barrier together. Production drops with age. They're one of the few ingredients I'd…

Less famous than vitamin C, gentler than hydroquinone, and one of the few quiet brighteners with decent evidence behind it.

Witch hazel gets recommended as a gentle natural option. Most of what's on drugstore shelves is mostly alcohol, and the alcohol is…

Heartleaf is the K-beauty ingredient showing up in 2026 formulations where centella used to sit. The case for it, and whether the…

Aloe is a real anti-inflammatory and a real humectant. It's also the most over-promised plant in skincare. Treat it like a specialist,…

Hyaluronic acid is the most-named hydrator in skincare. It's also the one most often used wrong — and in dry air, it…

Beta-glucan hydrates as well as hyaluronic acid and quiets inflammation in a way HA doesn't. K-beauty has known this for years. Western…

AHAs work on surface tone. BHAs travel into pores. PHAs are the gentle option when everything else is too much. One family…

Retinoids are the most evidence-backed anti-aging category in skincare. They're also the most confusingly named. Here's the family tree.

Galactomyces ferment filtrate is the active behind SK-II's Pitera. The science is real and well-documented. The $185 price tag is not.
Modern skincare is an ingredient game. Brand names matter less than the molecules inside the bottle, and the brands that succeed are the ones that explain those molecules honestly. The Ingredients library exists because nobody else is doing this work at the depth and clarity it deserves.
Ten subcategories cover the whole field: Retinoids & Bakuchiol (the cell-turnover family), Vitamin C (every form, from L-ascorbic acid to ascorbyl glucoside), Niacinamide, Peptides, Acids (AHA, BHA, PHA), Hydrators (hyaluronic acid, glycerin, polyglutamic acid), Ceramides & Lipids, Microbiome Ingredients (pre/pro/postbiotics, ferments), Korean & Biotech Actives (PDRN, exosomes, snail mucin), and Sunscreen Filters.
Every entry follows the same structure. A 60–90 word quick-answer up top so you can leave with the key facts in 30 seconds. Then the science, in plain English. Then the clinical evidence, with citations and publication dates so you can verify. Pairing rules, side effects, who should avoid, recommended concentrations, and which forms are FDA-approved in the US.
Elelaf is FDA-approved and manufactured in South Korea — the world's most innovative skincare lab ecosystem. We pay close attention to which ingredients are approved where, and which are still under regulatory review (looking at you, exosomes). Our ingredient pages will always tell you the regulatory status, not just the marketing claim.