
Highlights
WHAT IS IT?
Vitamin C Water Cream Face Moisturizer, 5 key ingredients
FEATURES
Vitamin-C-enriched water-based cream, hydrates and nourishes skin, enriched with orange peel extract and niacinamide, improves skin texture, minimizes open pores, fine lines and wrinkles, quick-absorbing formula, free from parabens, added color, silicone and animal byproducts
BEST FOR
combination
CHECKS
Free from parabens, added color, silicone and animal byproducts
Who Is It For?
What Does It Help With?
Hydration Natural Glow Improves Skin Texture Reduces Open Pores Fine Lines And WrinklesBudget
Affordable (under $30)How To Use
Which routine should it be used in?
Instructions:
Key Information
What TNW The Natural Wash Says
Product Description:
Give your skin an instant boost of hydration and revive its natural glow with TNW – The Natural Wash Vitamin C Water Cream. It has a light and quick-absorbing formula that penetrates deep into the skin, leaving it soft and supple. With active ingredients like orange peel extract, niacinamide, and hyaluronic acid, this face cream makes your skin naturally glowing, minimizes the visibility of open pores, fine lines and wrinkles and improves the overall skin texture. Other ingredients included in this water cream are avocado extract and vitamin E which restores the lost nourishment of your skin, making it soft and supple.
About the Brand:
Ingredients Overview
Ingredients List
orange-peel-extract, hyaluronic-acid, avocado-extract, niacinamide, vitamin-e
Key Ingredients
Orange Peel Extract, Hyaluronic Acid, Avocado Extract, Niacinamide, Vitamin E
Ingredients Details
Niacinamide
Common Name(s): Vitamin b3,nicotinamide,pyridine-3-carboxamide
CAS Number: 98-92-0
DESCRIPTION
What It Does: Niacinamide strengthens the skin barrier, reduces visible pore size, regulates sebum production, fades dark spots, and improves skin texture and tone.
Why It's Used: It is used because it addresses multiple skin concerns at once without irritation, making it suitable for all skin types. it is stable in formulations and pairs well with most other actives.
How It Works: Niacinamide inhibits the transfer of melanosomes (pigment packets) to skin cells, reducing hyperpigmentation. it also stimulates ceramide synthesis to strengthen the skin barrier and reduces inflammation by modulating cytokine activity.
Typically Found In: Serums,moisturizers,toners,cleansers,eye creams,sunscreens,primers
TECHNICAL DETAILS
Primary Category: Active ingredient – vitamin
Secondary Functions: Barrier repair,brightening,anti-inflammatory
Application Areas:
Facial Skincare
Body Care
Hair Care
Beard Care
Color Cosmetics (Makeup)
Dietary/Oral Supplements
Typical Concentration Range: 2%–10% (typical: 5%; higher concentrations may cause flushing in some individuals)
SOURCING & ETHICS
Vegan Status: Yes – synthetically produced
Halal Status: Yes – synthetic origin
Source Notes: Commercially produced via synthesis from nicotinic acid or 3-cyanopyridine. no animal-derived sources used in cosmetic-grade niacinamide.
SKIN COMPATIBILITY
Irritancy Rating: 1/5 – very low; concentrations above 10% may cause temporary flushing in sensitive individuals
Comedogenicity Rating: 0/5 – non-comedogenic
Sensitivity Concerns: At concentrations >10%, some users experience niacin flush (transient redness/tingling). generally very well-tolerated.
Safe for Sensitive Skin: Yes – one of the best-tolerated actives for sensitive skin
SAFETY & COMPATIBILITY
Safety Profile: Extensively studied and considered very safe. ewg hazard score: 1. no significant systemic toxicity concerns at topical concentrations.
Works Well With: Retinol,peptides,ahas/bhas,hyaluronic acid,ceramides,zinc,vitamin c,spf
Avoid Combining With: High concentrations of vitamin c (ascorbic acid) may theoretically convert to niacin – use at different times if using pure l-ascorbic acid above 15%
SCIENTIFIC NOTE
Niacinamide is a precursor to nad+ and nadp+, coenzymes vital to cellular energy metabolism. its benefits for dna repair and mitochondrial function make it a key ingredient in anti-aging strategies.
Last Verified: Cosing database,cir safety assessment,ewg skin deep,pubmed clinical studies
Primary Sources: 2026-03-12