The Three-Second Ritual Behind Celiglow's Rise
When Soo-jin left Seoul for Sydney two decades ago, she packed a small ritual she assumed she'd never have to think twice about: the collagen, the salmon-derived PDRN, the plant extracts her mother and grandmother leaned on to keep their skin looking luminous well into their later years. It would be twenty years before that ritual became a business.
Today, Celiglow — the single balm stick she built around that routine — is one of the most talked-about names in Australian beauty, with a community of more than 8,500 women and a launch run that has repeatedly outpaced stock. Its promise is unusually modest for the category: not a transformation, but a three-second morning step.
"I didn't set out to invent something new. I wanted to bottle what already worked — and make it effortless for women who don't have ten minutes to spare."— Soo-jin, Founder of Celiglow
The insight was deceptively simple. Most "glow" products, she noticed, were designed for skin in its twenties — skin that still holds water easily. For women over 40, especially under the harsh Australian sun, the challenge isn't colour or coverage. It's the look of hydration: skin that appears plumper, dewier and more rested, so makeup sits smoothly instead of settling into fine lines by mid-afternoon.
Celiglow's answer is a solid balm that melts on contact, built around a 5% concentration of Volufiline alongside hyaluronic acid and low-molecular-weight collagen — a pairing prized in Korean formulation for the appearance of fuller, more cushioned skin. One swipe across the cheekbones, under-eyes and neck, and the finish reads as lit-from-within rather than layered-on.
For Soo-jin, the bigger win is who the brand speaks to. "I built it for the woman everyone else had stopped designing for," she says. "Busy. A little dehydrated. Done with ten-step routines. She deserves to recognise herself in the mirror again." On current numbers, a fast-growing waitlist of Australian women appears to agree.















