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Oridzin: Blending Ancient Techniques With Modern Skincare

by Dr. Aanchal Panth (dermatologist)
November 29, 2025
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Korean grandmothers figured this out ages ago. So did women in Japan, India, and across Southeast Asia. They weren’t reading ingredient labels or watching YouTube tutorials—they just passed down what worked. Rice water for brightness. Turmeric for inflammation. Green tea makes the skin look alive.

Then the beauty industry noticed. And now we’re paying £85 for things our ancestors made in their kitchens.

Oridzin isn’t really a brand. It’s more of a philosophy that’s been floating around skincare circles, pulling from these old traditions and repackaging them for people sick of the seventeen-step routines that promise everything and deliver breakouts.

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • How Traditional Rituals Became a Marketing Goldmine
  • Ingredients You’ll See Everywhere
  • Skin Reflects Everything Else
  • Celebrities and the Bare-Skin Movement
  • Spas Figured Out the Angle
  • What’s Actually Going On Here

How Traditional Rituals Became a Marketing Goldmine

Tatcha built a whole empire selling Japanese beauty secrets to Western audiences. Glow Recipe took Korean fruit-based skincare and ran with it. La Mer charges genuinely offensive prices for seaweed-adjacent products. These companies didn’t invent ritual skincare—women in Okinawa weren’t waiting for a venture-backed startup to tell them what to put on their faces.

What happened is simpler. Someone realized there was money in slowing down.

Your coworker spending twenty minutes massaging essence into her cheekbones every night? She’s not crazy. She watched a TikTok about glass skin, went down a rabbit hole, and now owns more serums than she has days of the week. Oridzin taps into that same energy. Less about specific products, more about actually paying attention to your skin instead of treating it like a problem you throw products at until something sticks.

Ingredients You’ll See Everywhere

Snail mucin sounds disgusting until you try it. Actual snail secretion, filtered and bottled, and people are genuinely obsessed. Hyaluronic acid pulls moisture into the skin. Green tea is an antioxidant. Honey for its antibacterial properties—Cleopatra allegedly bathed in milk and honey, which sounds unsanitary but apparently worked for her.

Rice water keeps showing up, too. Japanese women have used it for centuries. You can make it yourself by soaking rice and using the cloudy water that’s left over. Does it work? Plenty of people say yes. Scientific studies are less conclusive, but skincare has always been part science, part placebo, part ritual.

The Oridzin approach isn’t about any single miracle ingredient. It’s the combination, and more importantly, the how. Warming products between your palms before applying. Pressing instead of rubbing. Taking sixty seconds instead of six.

Sounds tedious. For some people, it becomes meditative. Your mileage will vary.

Skin Reflects Everything Else

This is where the philosophy gets broader. Sleep four hours, drink only coffee, stress about deadlines constantly—your face will tell that story. No serum fixes chronic exhaustion. No moisturizer counteracts dehydration from the inside out.

Oridzin wraps basic health advices into skincare. Drink water. Get enough sleep. Manage stress somehow. None of this is new information. But attaching it to a beauty routine gives people structure. A reason to actually follow through.

Self-care through skincare, or skincare as an excuse for self-care. Works either way.

Celebrities and the Bare-Skin Movement

Hailey Bieber turned “glazed donut skin” into a phrase people use unironically. Zendaya shows up to red carpets looking like she’s wearing almost nothing on her face. Alicia Keys went through a whole no-makeup phase that got tons of press.

Are these women genuinely committed to the minimal makeup philosophy? Do they have access to dermatologists, facialists, and treatments most people can’t afford? Obviously both. A celebrity saying “I just use water and sunscreen” while having monthly facials and custom formulations isn’t exactly relatable advice.

But the influence matters anyway. Heavy contouring looks increasingly dated. Instagram face—that carved, filtered, otherworldly look—peaked a few years ago. The goal shifted toward skin that photographs well with nothing on it. Whether that’s achievable without professional help is a different question.

Spas Figured Out the Angle

Bali, Seoul, Tokyo, Kyoto. These places have beauty rituals embedded in their cultures. Onsens in Japan. Jjimjilbangs in Korea. Ayurvedic treatments in India. Tourists have always sought these out.

What’s changed is how aggressively it’s marketed. “Authentic” experiences packaged for wellness travelers who want the real thing but also want it to be comfortable and Instagrammable. Some of it genuinely connects to tradition. Some of it is a hotel spa slapping a Japanese name on a standard facial and charging triple.

The demand exists because quick fixes stopped feeling satisfying. People want something that feels meaningful, even if that meaning is partially manufactured.

What’s Actually Going On Here

Fast beauty burned people out. New launches every week. Trends are cycling so fast you can’t finish a product before it’s considered outdated. Routines promising transformation and delivering irritation.

Oridzin pushes back against that noise. Nourish instead of conceal. Slow down instead of rushing through. Actually, look at what your skin needs instead of immediately grabbing concealer.

It won’t suit everyone. Some skin conditions require specific treatments that don’t fit neatly into a philosophy about ancient wisdom. Dermatologists exist for a reason. But as a general rejection of the constant churn, the pressure to buy more and do more, and fix problems you didn’t know you had?

Makes sense why people are gravitating toward it.

Dr. Aanchal Panth (dermatologist)

Dr. Aanchal Panth (dermatologist)

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