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All articlesMay 12, 2026
EADEMSkinfixCeramidesPeptidesMay 2026

EADEM Cloud Cushion vs Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream in May 2026

A May 2026 comparison of EADEM Cloud Cushion and Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream for dry skin, barrier support, makeup prep, and richer night routines.

Glass Editorial Team

Glass Editorial Team

Skincare routines, ingredient education, and consistency tips.

EADEM Cloud Cushion vs Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream in May 2026

EADEM Cloud Cushion and Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream are close enough to make the choice feel annoying.

Both sit in the ceramide-and-peptide moisturizer lane. Both have a barrier-support story. Both are fragrance-free. Both are more serious than a basic water cream. Both make sense for skin that feels dry, dull, tired, or less resilient than usual.

But I would not treat them as interchangeable.

In May 2026, I would choose EADEM Cloud Cushion Dewy Plumping Cream if I wanted a dewy, makeup-ready moisturizer that still has barrier support. I would choose Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream if I wanted a richer dry-skin barrier cream with a more classic lipid-repair feel.

EADEM Cloud Cushion Dewy Plumping Cream jar

That is the whole decision in plain language:

EADEM is the polished cushion cream.

Skinfix is the richer barrier cream.

Quick Comparison

CategoryEADEM Cloud CushionSkinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream
Best fitDry, normal, or combination skin that wants dewy comfort and makeup prepDry, sensitive, or treatment-tired skin that wants richer barrier support
Product laneCushioned brightening moisturizerRich ceramide and peptide barrier cream
Price signal$48 in the Glass product file$20 to $85 size range in the Glass product file
Rating signalAbout 4.78 with roughly 900 reviewsAbout 4.56 with roughly 860 reviews
Texture expectationPlush, dewy, smoother under makeupButtery, richer, more cream-forward
Key ingredientsGlycerin, niacinamide, squalane, ceramides, cholesterol, tetrapeptide-30, tremellaGlycerin, shea butter, lipid complex, ceramides, cholesterol, peptides, hyaluronic acid
Better morning pickUsually yes, especially for dry makeup prepSometimes, but richer and more likely to be a night preference
Better night pickGood for daily comfortStronger for dry skin recovery nights
Skip ifYou hate dewy finishes or niacinamide bothers youYou hate richer creams or clog easily from heavy textures

Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream jar

The Short Answer

Choose EADEM Cloud Cushion if your routine problem is that skin looks dry, flat, or rough under sunscreen and makeup.

Choose Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream if your routine problem is that dry skin does not stay comfortable with lighter creams.

That distinction matters. A makeup-prep moisturizer and a richer barrier cream can overlap on ingredients, but they solve different mornings and nights.

EADEM feels more useful when you want glow and comfort in the same step. Skinfix feels more useful when you want a dedicated cream that takes barrier support seriously enough to be the last step of a dry-skin routine.

If you want the larger category view, I compared ceramide moisturizers at Sephora gives the broader map. This page is the narrower decision.

Why These Two Are Easy To Confuse

Both products use language that sounds like skin repair plus visible payoff.

EADEM talks in terms of cushion, dewy plumping, ceramides, peptides, dark spots, redness, and makeup prep. Skinfix talks in terms of triple lipid support, peptides, moisture retention, smoother-looking skin, and barrier strength.

If you only read the product names, both sound like the answer for dry skin that wants to look better.

The real split is texture and routine job.

EADEM is trying to make the skin look bouncy, bright, and ready for the day. Skinfix is trying to give dry skin a more substantial lipid-rich cream.

That does not make one better. It means the better pick depends on whether your pain point happens at 8 a.m. under sunscreen or at 10 p.m. when your face feels tight after treatment.

EADEM Cloud Cushion: Best When Finish Matters

EADEM Cloud Cushion is the one I would open first for a polished daytime routine.

The formula has a cushioned base: glycerin, caprylic/capric triglyceride, fatty alcohols, niacinamide, babassu seed oil, squalane, shorea seed butter, dimethicone, oat, rice bran, bisabolol, tremella mushroom, ceramides, cholesterol, phytosphingosine, and tetrapeptide-30.

That is a lot of comfort and finish support in one cream. The presence of dimethicone also makes sense for makeup prep, because it can help the surface feel smoother when used in the right amount.

I would use EADEM when:

  • sunscreen looks dry or chalky over bare skin
  • foundation clings to cheek texture
  • the face looks dull even after serum
  • a water cream feels too temporary
  • a rich cream looks too heavy for daytime
  • the routine needs one elegant moisturizer, not another treatment step

The product is not just about moisture. It is about how moisturized skin looks.

Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream: Best When Comfort Matters More

Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream is the more classic dry-skin barrier pick.

The formula opens with water, caprylic/capric triglyceride, glycerin, shea butter, vegetable oil, cetyl lactate, propanediol, fatty alcohols, emollient esters, rice bran, squalene, ceramides, sodium hyaluronate, cholesterol, phytosphingosine, aloe, and other lipid-supporting pieces.

That makes it richer on paper than EADEM. It is also positioned specifically for dry skin, while EADEM stretches across normal, dry, combination, and oily skin.

I would use Skinfix when:

  • cheeks feel dry again two hours after moisturizer
  • retinoid nights leave the face tight
  • winter or indoor air makes lighter creams fail
  • a barrier routine needs a more serious last step
  • makeup prep is secondary to comfort
  • you want multiple size options before committing

Skinfix is the one I would treat as a night-leaning cream first.

Texture And Finish

This is the most important section.

EADEM should feel plush and dewy. The goal is a soft, hydrated face that still looks good under sunscreen or makeup. If you use too much, that same plushness can become shine or slip.

Skinfix should feel richer and more cream-forward. The goal is comfort, moisture retention, and a more protected skin feel. If you use too much, the richness can feel heavy or possibly too present for acne-prone or oily areas.

If you hate heavy creams, EADEM is the easier bet.

If dewy creams disappear too quickly on you, Skinfix is the stronger bet.

Morning Use

For morning, I would start with EADEM.

Use a small amount on damp skin, let it settle, then apply sunscreen. It has the clearer makeup-prep story and a more elegant daytime lane. It also makes sense for skin that wants glow without adding a separate primer or oil.

Skinfix can still work in the morning for dry skin, especially under a drying sunscreen. But I would test the amount carefully. A richer cream under sunscreen can be beautiful when the skin needs it and too much when the skin does not.

If you are building a full daytime order, how I would use EADEM Cloud Cushion under makeup is the more specific routine guide.

Night Use

At night, Skinfix gets stronger.

Dry skin often needs a cream that does not just look nice at application. It needs a cream that helps the face stay comfortable until morning. Skinfix has the richer barrier-cream structure for that job.

EADEM still works at night, especially if your skin is normal-dry or you want one cream for morning and evening. It is also a better fit if heavy night creams make you break out or wake up shiny.

But if I were choosing one product for retinoid-adjacent dryness, cold weather, or a routine where lighter creams keep failing, I would lean Skinfix.

For the broader evening setup, night skincare routine for dry skin is the page I would pair with this decision.

Barrier Support

Both products have a real barrier-support argument.

EADEM uses multiple ceramides, cholesterol, phytosphingosine, squalane, fatty texture ingredients, and soothing support. It also includes niacinamide, which can help barrier function for many people.

Skinfix uses ceramides, sterols, fatty acids, cholesterol, phytosphingosine, sodium hyaluronate, glycerin, shea butter, and peptide positioning in a richer cream base.

The difference is not whether one has barrier ingredients and the other does not. Both do.

The difference is how strongly each product is built around that job. Skinfix is more barrier-first. EADEM is barrier plus glow plus makeup prep.

Dark Spots And Uneven Tone

EADEM has the clearer tone-support story because of its brand lane, niacinamide placement, and tetrapeptide-30 callout.

I would still keep this grounded. If dark spots are the main concern, moisturizer is supportive. Sunscreen, consistency, and targeted treatments do the heavier lifting.

Cloud Cushion can make sense in a tone-focused routine because dry or irritated skin often makes uneven tone look worse. A good moisturizer can reduce that visual roughness. But I would not expect it to replace a dedicated dark spot serum.

Skinfix is less tone-led. It is more about dry skin, dullness, and barrier comfort.

Sensitive Skin

Both products are fragrance-free, which is helpful.

The next question is not fragrance. It is personal tolerance.

EADEM includes niacinamide high in the list, plus botanicals and a dewy cream structure. That can be great for many people, but not for skin that dislikes niacinamide.

Skinfix is richer and more lipid-heavy. That can be great for dry sensitive skin, but not for people who break out or feel congested from rich creams.

So the sensitive-skin choice depends on the pattern:

  • niacinamide bothers you: lean Skinfix
  • rich creams clog you: lean EADEM
  • you need daytime elegance: lean EADEM
  • your face feels dry and tight by morning: lean Skinfix

Acne-Prone Or Congestion-Prone Skin

Neither product is the automatic answer for acne-prone skin.

EADEM is lighter-looking and more daytime-friendly, but it is still a cream with emollients, niacinamide, and a dewy finish. Skinfix is richer and more likely to feel like too much for someone who clogs easily.

If I were acne-prone and curious, I would test EADEM first in a thin layer, especially on dry zones. I would use Skinfix more carefully, probably at night and not across the most congestion-prone areas right away.

If your real need is a lighter barrier moisturizer, the existing Skinfix gel-cream page may fit better: I checked Skinfix Gel Cream.

Value And Size

EADEM is simpler: one main $48 jar in the Glass file.

Skinfix has a wider size range, from mini to value and refill options in the Glass file. That matters if you are cautious with rich creams. A mini can be useful when the concern is texture tolerance.

Value is not just price per ounce. Value is finishing the product.

If EADEM makes your morning routine easier every day, it may be the better value even if Skinfix has more size flexibility. If Skinfix replaces two not-quite-rich-enough night creams, it may be the better value.

The product you finish is usually the better buy.

Which One I Would Choose By Skin Type

For dry skin that wears makeup, I would start with EADEM in the morning and Skinfix at night if budget allows. If choosing one, I would pick EADEM when the day look matters most and Skinfix when comfort matters most.

For normal skin, I would pick EADEM. Skinfix may be more cream than needed unless the routine includes drying treatments.

For combination skin, I would pick EADEM and apply it unevenly: more on cheeks, less on T-zone.

For oily skin, I would probably choose neither as a first pick. If forced, I would try EADEM sparingly before trying Skinfix.

For sensitive dry skin, I would choose based on the known pattern: Skinfix if rich creams help, EADEM if rich creams feel too heavy.

The Mistake I Would Avoid

The mistake is buying both because they sound similar.

They are not the same slot if you build the routine intentionally. EADEM is the cream I would judge by morning finish, makeup prep, and daily glow. Skinfix is the cream I would judge by overnight comfort, dry-skin relief, and barrier-routine staying power.

If you buy both, give them different jobs. Do not layer them together and then blame the products for feeling heavy.

Bottom Line

EADEM Cloud Cushion is the better pick if you want a dewy, makeup-ready, ceramide-and-peptide moisturizer that makes dry or dull skin look smoother during the day.

Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream is the better pick if you want a richer barrier cream for dry, treatment-tired, or comfort-starved skin.

My one-line rule: buy EADEM for the polished morning face; buy Skinfix for the richer night cream job.

FAQ

Is EADEM Cloud Cushion better than Skinfix Triple Lipid-Peptide Cream?

It is better for makeup prep and a dewy daytime finish. Skinfix is better for richer dry-skin barrier support.

Which one is better for dry skin?

Skinfix is the stronger pick for very dry skin. EADEM is better for dry skin that still wants a polished morning finish.

Which one is better under makeup?

EADEM is the better starting point under makeup because its whole texture story is more makeup-ready.

Which one should I use with retinol?

Skinfix is the more obvious retinol-night cream for dry skin. EADEM can still work if you need something less rich and your skin tolerates niacinamide.

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