Apple cider vinegar works because it brings acetic acid and malic acid to the party, and those two acids don’t arrive quietly. They go after the sticky layer of dead skin cells, loosen the oily film sitting on top, and make the surface less friendly to the bacteria that thrive in clogged, overfed pores.
Think of your face like a sink drain coated in greasy film and old soap scum. Water slides right over it. ACV acts like a harsh rinse cycle that scrubs the pipe walls clean — but if the pressure is too high, it starts damaging the pipe itself.
That’s why diluted use matters so much. Straight vinegar on the face is not a “stronger version” of the same thing; it’s acid with the training wheels ripped off.
And that’s where the skin gets tricky, because the first thing people notice is often the shine dropping fast. The second thing they notice is the tightness, the dry drag, the little hot patches that show up after the glow wears off — and that’s not a coincidence.
Wall Street doesn’t build empires around a kitchen bottle with a sour bite and a barnyard smell. That’s not because it fails. It’s because it doesn’t pay like a glossy cream in a gold tube.
But the mechanism gets even more interesting when you look at what happens to oily skin versus skin that’s already fragile…
Why Oily Skin Gets the First Big Shock
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