Combellure Brightening Complex Serum 30ml — Korean glow serum
Uneven tone isn't permanent — it's just uninstructed skin
Hyperpigmentation forms when melanocytes — the cells responsible for skin colour — overproduce melanin in response to UV, inflammation, or hormonal signals. The cells aren't broken; they're just responding to signals that say "make more pigment." Brightening actives work by interrupting those signals at multiple points in the melanin-production pathway. Combellure's Intensive Brightening Complex Serum stacks three clinically studied pathways into one formula, addressing pigmentation at the synthesis stage, the transport stage, and the surface stage simultaneously.
The three-pathway approach
Most brightening serums use one mechanism. This formula uses three:
- Tyrosinase inhibition — arbutin and niacinamide block the enzyme that triggers melanin synthesis before it starts
- Melanin transfer interruption — niacinamide prevents melanosomes (pigment packets) from being transferred from melanocytes to keratinocytes, stopping existing pigment from reaching the skin surface
- Accelerated surface renewal — fermented exfoliant complex speeds the shedding of already-pigmented surface cells, revealing fresher skin underneath
Each mechanism alone produces modest results. Combined and delivered in a concentrated serum, the cumulative effect on uneven tone is significantly faster.
Key actives
| Ingredient | Mechanism |
|---|---|
| Alpha-arbutin | Tyrosinase inhibitor — reduces melanin synthesis at source |
| Niacinamide (B3) 10% | Blocks melanin transfer; evens tone; strengthens barrier |
| Tranexamic acid | Anti-inflammatory pathway — reduces UV-triggered pigmentation signals |
| Vitamin C derivative (ascorbyl glucoside) | Antioxidant; brightens existing surface pigment |
| Fermented galactomyces filtrate | Gentle enzymatic exfoliation; microbiome support |
| Adenosine | Anti-wrinkle certified active; improves overall skin radiance |
How to use
- Apply to clean, dry skin after toner — before moisturiser
- Use 3–4 drops, pressing gently into areas of uneven tone (cheeks, forehead, upper lip)
- Allow 90 seconds to absorb before layering
- Use morning and evening; always apply broad-spectrum SPF 50+ in the morning — brightening actives make skin more vulnerable to UV-triggered pigmentation
- Expect gradual, cumulative improvement over 6–12 weeks of consistent use
Specs
| Volume | 30 ml |
| Skin type | All — particularly effective for post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, sun spots, melasma |
| Texture | Clear, lightweight serum — absorbs without residue |
| Brand | Combellure (꼼벨르) |
| Country of origin | South Korea |
Shipping & delivery
Ships from South Korea via express international courier. Estimated delivery: 7–12 business days to Australia. Tracking number provided within 2 business days of dispatch. Arrives sealed and protected — safe for air transport.
Frequently asked questions
How long until I see results?
Tranexamic acid and arbutin begin suppressing melanin production within days, but you won't see it visually until new, less-pigmented cells reach the skin surface — which takes 4–6 weeks of daily cell turnover. Most users see a measurable difference in overall brightness at 4 weeks, with significant dark spot reduction at 8–12 weeks. Melasma (hormonally driven pigmentation) takes longer and may require specialist co-management.
Can I use this if I have sensitive skin?
Niacinamide at 10% is well-tolerated by most sensitive skin types and has been shown in clinical settings to reduce redness as well as pigmentation. Tranexamic acid is significantly gentler than hydroquinone and suitable for long-term use. The formula is fragrance-free and alcohol-free. For very reactive skin, start with once-daily evening use for two weeks before moving to twice daily.
Is this safe to use alongside other actives like retinol or AHA/BHA?
Yes, with timing. In the morning: this serum + SPF. In the evening: this serum first, then retinol or acids. Avoid applying acids and this serum simultaneously to the same area in the same step — layer them with a 10-minute gap to avoid pH interference with the vitamin C derivative. Niacinamide and retinol are fully compatible.
What's the difference between arbutin and hydroquinone?
Hydroquinone is a prescription-only melanin inhibitor that works very effectively but carries risks of ochronosis (blue-grey skin darkening) with long-term use and is banned for OTC cosmetic use in Australia and the EU. Alpha-arbutin is a naturally derived glycoside that hydrolyses slowly to release a small amount of hydroquinone at the skin surface — effective, but without the systemic exposure and regulatory concerns of pharmaceutical-strength hydroquinone.