Tirabeauty · 🇮🇳 India

The Face Shop White Seed Brightening Toner

5 ingredients
What's in it

Below is every ingredient in The Face Shop White Seed Brightening Toner explained, its standout actives, and the side effects reported in research for those actives — analysed for Indian skin.

Suitability at a glance — for Indian skin

🍄 Fungal-acne safe
No known Malassezia triggers detected
Fragrance-free
No fragrance or EU-declared allergens

Flags derived from the ingredient list using dermatology reference data (fungal-acne substrate, comedogenicity, EU allergens). General guidance, not a diagnosis.

Your questions, answered from the ingredient list

Is The Face Shop White Seed Brightening Toner fungal-acne safe?
Based on its listed ingredients, no known Malassezia (fungal-acne) triggers were detected in The Face Shop White Seed Brightening Toner.
Does The Face Shop White Seed Brightening Toner contain fragrance?
No fragrance ingredients or EU-declared allergens were detected in the listed ingredients of The Face Shop White Seed Brightening Toner.
Is The Face Shop White Seed Brightening Toner safe to use in pregnancy?
None of its listed ingredients are flagged for pregnancy caution in our reference data — but always confirm your full routine with your own doctor.

Answers are derived from the printed ingredient list and dermatology reference data — general guidance, not a diagnosis or a therapeutic claim.

Key actives

No standout actives — this is a basic/support formula.

Side effects reported in research

Aggregated from the active ingredients in this product.

Reported effectHow oftenNotes
Mild irritation or stingingRareUsually attributable to other formulation components rather than ceramides themselves.
Allergic contact dermatitisVery rareCeramides are well tolerated; reactions are uncommon and often linked to accompanying ingredients or preservatives.
Clogged pores or breakoutsRareMore related to occlusive or comedogenic base ingredients in the formulation than to ceramides.
Reduced product shelf-life or microbial contamination riskUncommonRemoving parabens may require alternative preservatives, which can occasionally be less effective or pose their own sensitivity risks.
Contact sensitization to alternative preservativesUncommonSubstitutes such as phenoxyethanol, methylisothiazolinone, or formaldehyde-releasers may cause irritation or allergy in some individuals.
No documented side effectsVery rareNo clinical or research data exist because the ingredient is not recognized; any reported effects cannot be verified.

Frequencies reflect typical cosmetic use reported in the literature, not a guarantee for your skin.

Full ingredient breakdown

IngredientWhat it does
Ceramides
Skin barrier-restoring lipid
Ceramides are naturally occurring lipids that make up a major component of the skin's outermost barrier, helping to retain moisture and protect against environmental damage. In skincare, they are added to replenish depleted lipids and support barrier function, particularly in dry or compromised skin.
Parabens Free
Marketing/formulation claim
"Parabens Free" indicates a product is formulated without paraben preservatives (e.g., methylparaben, propylparaben), which are common antimicrobial agents used to prevent microbial growth in cosmetics. It is not an active ingredient itself but a label claim describing the absence of a preservative class.
Shah & Nahar
Unknown / not a recognized skincare ingredient
"Shah & Nahar" does not correspond to any established dermatological or cosmetic-chemistry ingredient; it appears to be a company or surname rather than a recognized skincare substance. No verifiable function, mechanism, or formulation role can be attributed to it.
Worli
Unrecognized ingredient
"Worli" is not a recognized or documented skincare ingredient in dermatological or cosmetic-chemistry literature; no INCI listing or peer-reviewed data could be identified for it. The name may be a brand term, misspelling, or non-standard label rather than an established active or formulation component.
Mumbai
N/A — not a recognized skincare ingredient
"Mumbai" is the name of a city in India and is not a known dermatological or cosmetic-chemistry ingredient. There is no scientific or formulation data describing it as a skincare component.

Key active = does the main work. Ingredient explanations are drawn from public databases & literature.

From published literature

Peer-reviewed papers on the active ingredients in this product, via PubMed.

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