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Kate Somerville RetAsphere 2-in-1 Retinol Night Cream in white jar

RetAsphere 2-in-1 Retinol Night Cream

Time-Release Retinol Pioneer

clinical Paraben Free Cruelty Free
55/100
DermFND score
Ingredient quality
5.9
Value for money
5.7
Suitability breadth
3.7
Irritation risk
High
$85.00
1 fl oz (30 mL) · other sizes available
Data confidence
Medium confidence
Launched
2013
Best season
those
PAO
12 mo.
after opening
Certifications
PETA cruelty-free
Alex Brufsky
Alex Brufsky Founder & Editor
Analysis by DermFND · Last verified May 2026 · Methodology
Verified reviewer
01 · Quick read

Pros & cons.

What we love
  • +Microencapsulated time-release retinol genuinely reduces irritation and peeling
  • +Built-in ceramide 3 and hyaluronic acid provide barrier support during retinol use
  • +Rich texture doubles as a night moisturizer for dry skin types
  • +Visible fine line smoothing reported within two weeks of consistent use
  • +Silicone-free and paraben-free formula with PETA cruelty-free certification
  • +Suitable for retinol beginners due to the gradual delivery mechanism
What to know
  • Lavender oil is a known sensitizer that contradicts the gentle retinol positioning
  • Thick texture takes 5-10 minutes to absorb with a tacky intermediate phase
  • Retinol concentration is undisclosed despite the $85 price tag
  • Jar packaging exposes retinol to air degradation with every use
  • Product appears discontinued with limited remaining availability
02 · Editorial analysis

The full review.

Retinol has always had an image problem. It is the ingredient dermatologists most consistently recommend for anti-aging, but it is also the ingredient most people abandon within the first month because of the peeling, the redness, the overnight transformation into someone who looks like they vacationed too close to the sun. Kate Somerville tried to fix this in 2013 with the RetAsphere, a night cream that encased retinol in tiny lipid bubbles designed to release it slowly over hours rather than all at once. It was an elegant idea. It was also, perhaps, slightly ahead of its time.

The RetAsphere Smart Release Carrier System is the product’s defining technology. PPG-12/SMDI Copolymer forms microsphere shells around particles of pure retinol. When these microspheres contact skin at body temperature, the lipid shells gradually dissolve, releasing retinol in a sustained curve rather than a single peak. In theory, this means the skin never experiences the high-concentration burst that triggers the irritation cascade — the redness, the flaking, the desperate reach for heavy moisturizer at 2 AM. In practice, many users report that this is indeed a gentler retinol experience than traditional formulations, with visible results appearing within two weeks and minimal peeling for most skin types.

The formulation earns the 2-in-1 name honestly. Ceramide 3, a skin-identical lipid, works to replenish the barrier ceramides that retinol use depletes. Sodium hyaluronate provides humectant hydration. Vitamin E stabilizes the retinol while conditioning the skin. And a dual seaweed extract system (chondrus crispus in both whole and hydrolyzed forms) creates a moisture-locking matrix. The result is a retinol cream that builds its own safety net — the treatment and the damage control arrive together.

Texture

The texture, however, is polarizing. This is a thick, rich cream that requires genuine effort to blend and absorb. Where most modern retinol products aim for lightweight, fast-absorbing textures, the RetAsphere sits on the skin with the confidence of a cream that knows it has important work to do and will not be rushed. Five to ten minutes to fully absorb is the commonly reported experience. There is a tackiness during this period that some find comforting — it feels like the product is working — and others find simply annoying.

Best for

For dry skin, this thickness is a feature. The cream doubles as a night moisturizer, and by morning the skin feels noticeably plumper, smoother, and more luminous. For combination or oily skin, it is likely too much. The heavy emollient base, while protective, can feel suffocating on skin that does not need that level of occlusion.

Scent

The lavender oil is this formula’s most frustrating inclusion. In a product designed to be gentle on the skin — one that goes to the trouble of microencapsulating its retinol for reduced irritation — adding a known sensitizer feels contradictory. Lavender oil contains linalool and linalyl acetate, both EU-listed fragrance allergens that can cause contact sensitization with repeated use. It is a spa-scented concession to the luxury market that undermines the clinical credentials of the technology underneath.

Common Complaints

The retinol concentration is not disclosed, which at eighty-five dollars per ounce is a significant transparency gap. Based on its INCI position and the brand’s marketing as gentle and beginner-friendly, it is likely in the 0.1-0.5% range. The microencapsulation means even a lower concentration delivers sustained exposure, but consumers paying prestige prices deserve to know what they are getting.

Packaging

The jar packaging is another misstep. Retinol degrades on exposure to air and light — that is precisely why it needed to be encapsulated in the first place. Opening a jar of retinol cream nightly and exposing the surface to oxygen is not ideal, even with the microspheres providing a layer of protection for the undelivered product. An airless pump would have been the obvious choice and would have maintained consistency with the product’s emphasis on protecting the retinol.

About Kate Somerville

The RetAsphere has since been discontinued from Kate Somerville’s lineup, replaced by the +Retinol collection that pairs retinol with vitamin C. The brand’s decision to move on is likely commercial rather than scientific — the time-release concept was sound, but the market’s appetite for retinol products has evolved toward lighter textures, transparent concentrations, and cleaner ingredient profiles. The RetAsphere was a product that had the right idea about delivery but was dressed in a formula that belonged to an earlier era of luxury skincare.

Who Should Buy

For those who can still find it, the RetAsphere remains a viable option for dry-skinned retinol beginners who want a rich, protective formula that minimizes the adjustment period. The microencapsulation technology genuinely works as described, and the built-in ceramide and hyaluronic acid support is thoughtful. But the lavender oil, the jar packaging, the undisclosed concentration, and the discontinued status make it difficult to recommend over current alternatives that have learned from its strengths while avoiding its compromises.

03 · INCI · disclosed by brand

Ingredient analysis.

Ingredient Role Evidence Flag
Microencapsulated in a lipid microsphere shell (PPG-12/SMDI Copolymer) that melts at skin temperature for time-released delivery. This gradual release reduces the concentration spike that causes retinol irritation while maintaining prolonged efficacy through the night.
Well Established
OK
Skin-identical lipid that replenishes the barrier ceramides often depleted by retinol use. Works to counteract the dryness and barrier disruption that are common retinol side effects, making this a self-buffering retinol formula.
Well Established
OK
Low molecular weight hyaluronic acid form that provides deep hydration to counteract retinol-induced dryness. Part of the '2-in-1' concept — delivering retinol treatment and moisture replenishment simultaneously.
Well Established
OK
Antioxidant that stabilizes the retinol within the formula, extending its potency, while also providing skin-conditioning benefits that help buffer potential retinol irritation.
Well Established
OK
Dual seaweed extract system (whole and hydrolyzed forms) providing a moisture-locking matrix that helps the skin retain hydration during retinol treatment. Counters the dehydration typically associated with retinoid use.
Promising
OK
Full INCI list

Water, Ethylhexyl Palmitate, Diethylhexyl Carbonate, Diisopropyl Dimer Dilinoleate, Stearyl Alcohol, Cetearyl Alcohol, Propanediol, Jojoba Esters, Glycerin, Glyceryl Stearate, Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride, PEG-40 Stearate, Tocopheryl Acetate, PPG-12/SMDI Copolymer, Butylene Glycol, Pentylene Glycol, Polyacrylate-13, Ceteareth-20, Retinol, Polyisobutene, Chondrus Crispus (Carrageenan) Extract, Polysorbate 20, Cyperus Esculentus Tuber Extract, Lavandula Angustifolia (Lavender) Oil, Disodium EDTA, Prunus Armeniaca (Apricot) Fruit Extract, Cucumis Melo Cantalupensis Fruit Extract, Daucus Carota Sativa (Carrot) Root Extract, Mangifera Indica (Mango) Fruit Extract, Prunus Domestica Fruit Extract, Dioscorea Villosa (Wild Yam) Root Extract, Hydroxyphenyl Propamidobenzoic Acid, Cetyl Palmitate, Hydrolyzed Chondrus Crispus Extract, Ethylhexylglycerin, Triethanolamine, Ceramide 3, Sodium Hyaluronate, Phenoxyethanol, Linalool

Product flags
✗ Fragrance Free ✓ Alcohol Free ✗ Oil Free ✓ Silicone Free ✓ Paraben Free ✓ Sulfate Free ✓ Cruelty Free ✗ Vegan ✗ Fungal Acne Safe
Potential irritants
Lavandula Angustifolia (Lavender) OilLinaloolRetinolTriethanolamineCommon AllergensLinaloolLavandula Angustifolia (Lavender) Oil
04 · Compatibility

Skin match.

Pairs well with
Gentle hydrating cleanserHyaluronic acid serumSunscreen SPF 30+ (morning)Niacinamide
Skin types
Best for
drynormal
Works for
combination
Not ideal for
oilysensitive
05 · Evidence

The science.

The Science

RetAsphere technology uses retinol microencapsulation, a proven cosmetic science method. PPG-12/SMDI Copolymer forms lipid microsphere walls that protect retinol from degradation and control its release on the skin. Research in the International Journal of Pharmaceutics shows microencapsulated retinol has higher stability than free retinol in cosmetic formulations, with release profiles that reduce peak concentration exposure by 40-60%.

Retinol is one of the most studied anti-aging ingredients in dermatology. A 2007 Archives of Dermatology study by Kafi et al. shows that topical 0.4% retinol applied for 24 weeks improves fine wrinkles; histological analysis shows increased glycosaminoglycan and procollagen I expression in the dermis.

Ceramide 3 (ceramide NP) targets retinol-induced barrier disruption. Research in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology shows retinoid use can deplete stratum corneum ceramides, causing the dryness, irritation, and increased transepidermal water loss seen during the retinol adjustment period. Adding ceramide 3 replaces the specific lipid lost during retinol treatment.

Sodium hyaluronate adds humectant hydration to this barrier support. Its low molecular weight penetrates the upper epidermis to draw and retain water in layers affected by retinol-induced dehydration. Combining ceramide replenishment and hyaluronic acid hydration creates a dual support system that reduces the severity and duration of the retinol adjustment period.

References

  1. Improvement of naturally aged skin with vitamin A (retinol)Archives of Dermatology (2007)

Dermatologist Perspective

Dermatologists endorse retinol as a first-line topical anti-aging ingredient. Time-release delivery to reduce irritation aligns with clinical methods for building retinoid tolerance. Board-certified dermatologists recognize the benefit of pairing retinol with ceramide 3 and hyaluronic acid to address dryness and barrier disruption—the main reasons patients stop retinol treatment. However, dermatologists would note that the undisclosed concentration prevents comparison with products that state their retinol percentage, and the lavender oil inclusion conflicts with the product's gentle positioning.

06 · Where it fits

Where it fits in your routine.

AM routine
01 Gentle cleanser
02 Vitamin C serum
03 Moisturizer
04 Sunscreen SPF 30+
PM routine
01 Gentle cleanser
02 Hydrating toner
03 Kate Somerville RetAsphere 2-in-1 Retinol Night Cream This product
How to use

Apply a pea-sized amount to a clean, dry face at night. Avoid the eye area unless a dermatologist directs otherwise. Wait 5-10 minutes for full absorption before you apply other products. Use it every other night for the first two weeks to build tolerance, then use it nightly. Always apply broad-spectrum sunscreen SPF 30 or higher the next morning. Do not use with other retinoids, strong AHAs/BHAs, or benzoyl peroxide on the same nights.

Value assessment

RetAsphere costs $85 for 1 fluid ounce, a premium price driven by its proprietary microencapsulation technology. Because the retinol concentration is undisclosed, we cannot tell if the price pays for active ingredients or delivery system engineering. Nightly use lasts 2-3 months, making the monthly cost $30-40, similar to other prestige retinol products. Since it is discontinued, remaining stock may sell at discounts, improving its value. At full retail, the price is hard to justify against alternatives with transparent concentrations.

Who should buy

Retinol beginners with dry to normal skin want a gentler retinoid introduction with built-in barrier support. It works for those who stopped using retinol due to irritation and want a time-release approach. This is best for users who prefer a thick night cream texture and accept a longer absorption time.

Who should skip

Oily or acne-prone skin types will find the thick texture too heavy. Avoid this product if you are sensitive to lavender oil or fragrance. Pregnant or breastfeeding individuals must not use retinol products. Because this product is discontinued, choose a currently available product for a long-term retinol commitment.

07 · The fine print

Product details.

Texture

Thick white cream that is heavier than most retinol products. It needs more blending and rubbing than typical night creams and takes about 5-10 minutes to absorb fully.

Scent

The lavender oil gives a subtle spa-like lavender scent. The scent fades after application but stays noticeable while rubbing it in.

Packaging

An opaque white jar with a screw-top lid. Jar packaging exposes retinol to air, which affects stability, but the microencapsulation technology protects the retinol from degradation before application.

First use

The cream feels thick and absorbs slower than expected. A slight tackiness lasts for several minutes. By morning, skin feels smoother and more plumped. Retinol newcomers may feel mild tingling during the first week. Peeling or dryness can occur during the initial 1-2 week adjustment period.

How long it lasts

2-3 months with nightly facial application from the 1 oz size

Period after opening

12 months

Best season

All Year

Finish
satindewy
Certifications
PETA cruelty-free
08 · Behind the formula

The backstory.

The RetAsphere was Kate Somerville's answer to the fundamental retinol dilemma: the ingredient works, but people stop using it because of the irritation. Drawing on her clinic experience treating Hollywood clients who needed effective anti-aging without visible peeling or redness, she developed a time-release delivery system intended to make retinol tolerable for daily use. The product has since been replaced in the brand's lineup by the newer +Retinol collection.

About Kate Somerville

Established Brand (5–20 years)

Kate Somerville launched her clinical skincare line in 2004 from her West Hollywood medispa. The RetAsphere used proprietary microencapsulation technology as a signature anti-aging product. The brand discontinued The RetAsphere and replaced it with the newer +Retinol collection.

Brand founded: 2004 · Product launched: 2013
09 · Setting the record straight

Common myths.

Myth

Microencapsulated retinol has less potency than regular retinol because encapsulation reduces its strength.

Reality

Microencapsulation protects retinol from degradation and delivers it more efficiently into the skin over a longer period. The total retinol delivered may actually be higher than a non-encapsulated product because less is lost to air and light exposure. The encapsulation changes the delivery curve, not the potency.

Myth

Retinol creams that do not cause peeling lack the strength to work.

Reality

Retinol causes peeling and irritation, but these do not indicate efficacy. A time-release system delivers retinol gradually to achieve the same cellular turnover benefits without visible peeling. This works because the skin avoids the high-concentration burst that triggers the irritation cascade.

10 · Common questions

FAQ.

How does the RetAsphere time-release technology work?

The RetAsphere Smart Release Carrier System uses PPG-12/SMDI Copolymer lipid microsphere shells to encapsulate pure retinol. These microspheres melt at body temperature upon skin application. This releases retinol gradually over several hours, which lowers the concentration spike that causes redness, peeling, and irritation.

What percentage of retinol is in Kate Somerville RetAsphere?

The brand does not disclose the retinol concentration. Because of its INCI list position and marketing as a gentle retinol for beginners, the concentration is likely 0.1-0.5%. The microencapsulation technology allows even lower concentrations to work over time.

Can beginners use Kate Somerville RetAsphere?

Yes — the time-release delivery system makes retinol tolerable for sensitive skin and first-time retinol users. Use it every other night for the first two weeks, then use it nightly. The built-in ceramide and hyaluronic acid buffer potential dryness.

Is Kate Somerville RetAsphere safe during pregnancy?

No — this product contains retinol, a vitamin A derivative. Dermatologists and obstetricians advise against using retinol and other retinoid products during pregnancy and breastfeeding because of risks to fetal development.

11 · Real-world signal

What the community says.

Common praise

"Noticeable smoothing of fine lines within two weeks of consistent use"

"Rich moisturizing formula that prevents retinol-related dryness"

"Visible improvement in skin texture and morning brightness"

"Gentle enough for retinol beginners thanks to time-release system"

"Helps fade brown spots and hyperpigmentation over time"

Common complaints

"Very expensive at $85 per ounce with undisclosed retinol concentration"

"Thick heavy texture requires significant rubbing and takes 5-10 minutes to absorb"

"Can still cause redness and dryness despite gentle release claims"

"Lavender scent unwelcome for fragrance-sensitive users"

"Slightly sticky or tacky feel during absorption period"

Notable endorsements
Developed at Kate Somerville's West Hollywood celebrity medispa clinic
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