Affiliate Disclosure: I receive a small commission for purchases made via affiliate links.
How to cite: Wong M. How Make-Up Remover Cloths Work and Review. Lab Muffin Beauty Science. April 26, 2016. Accessed October 14, 2024.https://labmuffin.com/how-make-up-remover-cloths-work-and-review/
1 What’s a make-up remover cloth?
2 How do make-up remover cloths work?
3 Make-up remover cloths in action
3.1 Advantages of make-up remover cloths
3.2 Disadvantages of make-up remover cloths
4 Verdict
5 Make-up Remover Cloths
5.1 Have you tried make-up remover cloths? What do you think of them?
Make-up remover cloths are usually a soft fleecy flannel with dense, fluffy fibres about half a centimetre long. To use a make-up remover cloth, you simply wet it with warm water and rub on your face in small circular motions – and your make-up comes off, without using any “chemicals” (well, except for dihydrogen monoxide (H2O) and the substances in the cloth, the glucose you use to power your hands etc. etc.).
What sorcery is this? Here’s how this magic cloth works…
The key difference between these make-up remover cloths and regular washcloths is surface area. The dense pile is made of many small threads, so there are a lot more threads in cloth than if they were normal sized.
Surface area is important for a few reasons:
1. Friction. To lift the make-up from the skin, the fibres need to grip onto the make-up and pull it off. The greater the surface area, the more grip and friction each wipe will have without you having to push down so hard – instead of 5 large fibres going over a particular area, you get 50 fibres. It’s like with shoes – a shoe with a perfectly flat sole is going to have worse grip than a shoe with a ribbed sole, which has a better surface area. This means the cloth will remove more make-up with less irritation.
2. More thorough cleaning. Smaller fibres can get into cracks too small for normal cloths, and can get under finer particles of make-up.
3. Adsorption. If there’s enough friction, the make-up will lift off the skin, but then it’ll just be smeared around unless the cloth can grab onto it. Luckily, at a molecular level, everything is quite sticky with adhesive forces (technical term: van der Waals forces). Because there are so many fibres, these cloths can bind to dirt and hold it better than a normal cloth.
Geckos can walk on glass for the same reason – their toes are ribbed to give them a higher surface area, so they have stronger adhesive van der Waals forces with the glass, making them grippy.
Adding warm water to the removal process helps loosen make-up as well.
I tried out the Magic Make Up Remover, which cost me a whole $6 from The Reject Shop. It’s pretty obviously meant to be a dupe of the MakeUp Eraser, with the pink theme and a long pile reverse side for drying and exfoliating. I tested it on some of my toughest make-up:
- Rimmel Provocalips longwear lipstick
- Benefit They’re Real Push-up Liner
- Benefit They’re Real Waterproof Mascara
- Face of Australia Gel Liner (blue)
- Revlon lip stain
After applying them on the back of my hand, I let them set for half an hour. Then I soaked my cloth in some warm water and started buffing.
Interestingly, the mascara came off very easily. Waterproof mascara is the product that these cloths usually sell you on. It makes sense since mascara is a product that hardens on inflexible eyelashes, so it should flake off easily with friction. The black gel liner came off easily as well, though the blue gel liner had more staying power. The lip stain came off completely (though it mightn’t have had time to set properly). The longwear lipstick was the hardest to get off, even when I scrubbed violently (as you can see from the redness of my skin).
Here’s how my cloth looked after this:
I only used about an eighth of it – for a full face, I need about a hand area’s worth. With less long-wearing make-up, you could probably get most of the make-up out with some soap and water, then do a deep machine clean once a week or so.
On my face, I found that not all of my make-up was removed with just water and the cloth alone. In particular, it didn’t seem to work well for eyeliner and eyeshadow – I couldn’t get rid of it all before my eyes were sore from the rubbing. I think your success depends on both the brand of cloth you use, your make-up and your skin. For all the brands of make-up remover cloths, there are some online reviews saying that not all the make-up came off, so it’s not just because I have a budget version!
Advantages of make-up remover cloths
Less wastage (theoretically) – Make-up remover cloths are washable in your regular laundry and reusable, so even though they cost a bit more at the outset, you’ll save money in the long run by saving on make-up remover, cleanser, micellar water, cotton pads, make-up wipes etc., and it’s more environmentally friendly too. However, a lot of people end up using these make-up remover cloths like a more thorough regular washcloth, alongside make-up removers and cleansers.
Can avoid using make-up removers – If make-up removers and cleansers make you break out or irritate excessively but manual buffing is OK, a make-up remover cloth could be your saviour!
Use less make-up remover – If your make-up doesn’t come off completely with just the cloth alone, you can use a make-up remover with it – this will mean you’ll use less removers and cleansers.
Gently exfoliates – When used lightly, the cloth acts as a gentler physical exfoliant than scrubs or exfoliating brushes.
No rinsing required – If you’re lucky enough that the remover successfully removes all your make-up, then you don’t need to rinse your face afterwards, or worry about residues staying on your face! This is a major bonus for lazy nights, although to remove make-up thoroughly and gently you should be buffing for a while.
Disadvantages of make-up remover cloths
They don’t remove all types of make-up effectively – They claim to remove 100% of waterproof eye make-up, face paint and regular make-up with just water until your skin is squeaky clean, but according to reviews this doesn’t seem to be the case for everyone.
Rubbing and tugging – If your make-up is particularly stubborn, it might not come off without rubbing and tugging. I found this to be a particularly big problem with eye make-up.
Bacterial buildup – The cloths recommend that you wring them out and dry them after each use, with a wash once a week, but without a cleanser or soap it’s possible that you’ll get bacteria growing on the cloth. You could buy enough so you can wash each one after one use, but realistically not many people are going to do that. Theoretically, the make-up remover cloths made from synthetic fibres will be more resistant to bacterial growth than the ones that use cotton, since you can squeeze them dry more easily.
Can overexfoliate – The make-up remover cloth requires a bit of scrubbing, which can irritate your skin if daily physical exfoliation is too much for your skin.
I can see myself using this along with make-up remover, but I don’t think I can let go of my cleansing products completely… except maybe on a particularly lazy night. Even then, I’m using a two-phase remover for my eyes (mega-review coming soon!).
MakeUp Eraser – One of the biggest brands with lots of TV spots and reviews, claims to be the original version. 100% polyester. Just launched in Sephora Australia.
Wonder Cloth – The other big brand – it’s 40% cotton and 60% synthetic rayon. You can get it at Bed Bath and Beyond in the US as well.
Magic Make Up Remover – The one I used for this review. It’s a measly $6 at The Reject Shop but who knows how long it’ll be there for…
Jane Iredale Magic Mitt – This one comes in a handy mitt shape so you can easily get it into tight spots without so much slipping around. This one does actually call itself microfibre.
Elume Makeup Remover – This comes in a handy set of 2 square towels, with a long pile and a short pile side – it’s essentially a MakeUp Eraser cut in half. 100% polyester as well.
Microfiber cloths (Amazon, eBay) – You can buy cheap microfiber cleaning cloths and use those instead. I’ve heard that they’re a bit rougher than these cloths that are especially designed for make-up removal, but the upside is that they’re better for exfoliating. They’re cheap too, so you can get a few on rotation and you won’t have to wait for your cloth while it’s being laundered. I’ve just ordered a handful off eBay in yet another attempt to control my blackheads.
Bubble fleece/minky fabric – Supposedly this is similar to make-up remover cloth fabric. I haven’t tried this yet but if it works, this would be a great way to get a whole bunch of cloths on rotation!
This post also contains affiliate links – if you decide to click through and support Lab Muffin financially, thank you! For more information, see Disclosure Policy.