How to Outsmart Engineered Expiry Dates Without Ditching Good Skincare
Skincare Logistics & Stability
How to Outsmart Engineered Expiry Dates Without Ditching Good Skincare
Beyond the “12M” icon: A guide to reclaiming your cabinet from the cycle of hygiene theater.
In the humid late summer of , a mid-level regulatory strategist named Arthur Penhaligon sat in a windowless office in Brussels, obsessing over the lifecycle of a lipstick. He wasn’t a chemist; he was a man interested in the logistics of trust.
At the time, the European Economic Community was trying to figure out how to tell a woman in Lyon that the face cream she bought in Munich wouldn’t turn into a petri dish of Gram-negative bacteria (bacteria that have a distinctively tough protective cell wall) before she reached the bottom of the pot. Arthur’s job was to bridge the gap between “it’s probably fine” and “this is a liability.”
He helped pave the way for what we now know as the PAO symbol-that tiny, ubiquitous icon of an open jar with a number and an ‘M’ inside. It was designed as a shield for the consumer, but over the decades, it has evolved into a very different kind of tool for the manufacturer.
The Engineering of “Expired”
The Psychology of the Plastic Clock
We have all stood there, squinting at the underside of a plastic tube, trying to remember if we cracked the seal in October or if this was a leftover from the previous winter. The “12M” symbol stares back with a sort of bureaucratic