Tower 28 Launched Its First Foundation, SunnyDays, with a 2,500-Person Wait List
My relationship with sunscreen is complicated because of my skin's sensitivity. On days I opt out of foundation and use sunscreen alone, I find that the patches of redness and irritation along my laugh lines and chin stick out like a sore thumb. So when Tower 28 launched SunnyDays, a tinted sunscreen foundation with SPF 30 made with consideration for sensitive skin types like mine — essentially promising not to irritate my skin but also offering skin-tone-matching coverage — I thought the only hurdle left was finding a shade match.
Before SunnyDays, Tower 28 founder Amy Liu, who has sensitive skin, went through many trials with often-irritating chemical sunscreens and hard-to-blend mineral sunscreens. "It made it tricky to find the perfect formula without irritating [my] skin or leaving a white cast," Liu recalls. Highlighting the challenges faced by those with conditions like eczema and acne, she says, "SPF protection is needed since hyperpigmentation-differences-treatments' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer' >sun damage can lead to scarring" and hyperpigmentation. Ellen Marmur, M.D., a board-certified dermatologist in New York City, defines this as "discolored or darkened [skin] for a variety of reasons, such as sun damage or acne scarring."
Liu was determined to create the first tinted sunscreen foundation gentle enough to receive the National Eczema Association's Seal of Acceptance, which it now has. "I knew our [sensitive-skin] community needed it and it didn't exist on the market," Liu says. The wait list opened two weeks prior to SunnyDays' official launch date and more than 2,500 customers eagerly signed up.
After 50 iterations and three years (amid the pandemic), Liu and makeup artist Kirin Bhatty created 14 tinted sunscreen foundation shades, starting with the deepest, Venice, first. "It was really important that all shades had zero white casts or oxidation," Liu says. "The team accomplished this by incorporating a mineral shield, titanium dioxide, and iron oxides as pigments "to reach that perfect tone." By working with these ingredients and taking into consideration how the mineral filter may manipulate color, oxidization was not an issue and true-to-skin-tone shades were achieved.
Tower 28 SunnyDay shades PCH, Third Street, and Melrose
The packaging started as a bottle, but Liu wanted to make sure all of the product could be used without leaving any at the bottom, so she quickly changed to a tube. And the thin nozzle creates a "hygienic needle nose that's basically a one-way, so bacteria can't get in and it allows you to control the amount of product that comes out," Liu says.
I was born and raised in sunny California, so I have a soft spot for things that remind me of home, and I love the product and shade names, like Silver Lake, Venice, and Topanga. And because I was brought up where the sun always shines, sunscreen in both my makeup and skin-care routine is an absolute must. Liu felt the same way when formulating SunnyDays. "We actually tried for a higher SPF but couldn't do it without sacrificing white cast or blendability," she says, after landing on the dermatologist-recommended SPF 30.
Once SunnyDays was in my possession, I unscrewed the lid from its squeezable tube, admiring the long, transparent, applicator tip. It's clear, which makes it easy to see and control how much product is coming out. (We've all been there with the first squeeze shooting out and wasting product.) The shade Point Dune is spot-on for my warm, olive-tone skin.
I used a damp makeup sponge for light coverage on my entire face, adding an extra dot or two of product where my redness shines through. Since the texture is remarkably light and creamy, additional coverage on my red zone did not irritate my skin or dry it out, eliminating any concerns about creases and cakey laugh lines as the day went on.
Editorial assistant Talia Gutierrez wears the shade Point Dune.
The finish starts out dewy but not the least bit oily, and then settles without oxidizing, somewhere between matte and glowy. As for my sensitive skin, my laugh lines and chin were not the least bit irritated during or after application. But don't just take my word for it — four other ishonest editors shared their first impressions and honest thoughts on Tower 28's SunnyDays SPF 30 Tinted Sunscreen Foundation.
"I've tried way more mineral sunscreens that I dislike than ones I can tolerate — plus, my skin can handle chemical formulas quite well — but this formula seriously blew me away," she says. "It blends in easily with just my clean fingers — no brushes needed — and seamlessly masks any redness and dark spots dotting my complexion. It's not overly dewy or matte — more like a sweet spot that just nails the 'second-skin' effect."
Associate digital beauty director Sarah Kinonen wears the shade Fairfax.
"I'm not much of a foundation person — it's much too heavy for my sensitive skin — but man, do I love a tinted moisturizer," says associate beauty director Sarah Kinonen. "When I first got my hands on Tower 28's SunnyDays Tinted Moisturizer, I was so excited. I shade-matched to the second lightest shade in the lineup, Larchmont, but I could have gone a little darker, thanks to the warm-weather glow I picked up during the summer months. Regardless, I only need a small squirt or two of the lightweight formula to cover my entire face in a thinly veiled, satin finish."
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