Brand and product catalog

Skincare Brand and Product Tracker for Routine Logs

A skincare routine becomes easier to review when every brand, product category, usage date, note, and progress photo stays connected to the same personal diary.

Revealog app screen for skincare brand and product routine tracking
Revealog connects product names, routine entries, notes, and progress photos.

People rarely use skincare products in isolation. One person may use a La Roche-Posay cleanser, a Bioderma sunscreen, a CeraVe moisturizer, a Vichy serum, an Eucerin body product, and a Nivea lip balm in the same month. Without a product tracker, that routine turns into a scattered set of screenshots, receipts, notes, and half-remembered dates.

Revealog’s role is to make that routine memory more structured. The app catalog is designed for personal logging: users can keep product names, brand names, categories, routine placement, diary notes, and photo context together. It is not a product ranking system, a medical advisor, or a brand endorsement page.

3,743 published product records in the current app catalog
60 skincare, cosmetic, and dermocosmetic brands represented
12 routine categories including SPF, cleanser, serum, and moisturizer

Why a brand and product tracker matters

Skincare content often focuses on the ideal routine order: cleanse, apply targeted products, moisturize, and protect during the day with sunscreen. That order is helpful, but it does not answer the practical question users face later: which exact product did I use, when did I start it, what changed in the rest of my routine, and what did I write in my notes?

A catalog-aware tracker makes the routine easier to audit. Instead of keeping a brand name in one place, a product photo in another, and the usage note somewhere else, Revealog keeps the product story attached to the routine entry. This is especially useful for people who rotate between pharmacy, dermocosmetic, luxury, mass-market, and indie skincare products.

Brands users may want to organize

The current Revealog app catalog includes product records across brands such as Nivea, L'Oreal Paris, Nuxe, Bioderma, Yves Rocher, SVR, Caudalie, La Roche-Posay, BioNike, Avene, Vichy, Bioxcin, Uriage, Garnier, Maruderm, Babe, The Purest Solutions, Cosmed, Dermoskin, Topicrem, Dermalogica, Institut Esthederm, Siveno, Embryolisse, Darphin, Filorga, Voonka, Neutrogena, Sebamed, and CeraVe.

Brand-name boundary

Brand names are used for product recognition and personal routine logging only. Revealog is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by these brands unless a partnership is explicitly stated.

Product categories that deserve routine context

A useful skincare diary should separate product categories clearly. Sunscreens, moisturizers, cleansers, treatment products, body care, hair care, serums, eye care, lip care, exfoliants, masks, and toners do different jobs in a routine. If all products are recorded as a single list, the diary becomes hard to review.

Sunscreen SPF entries benefit from date, reapplication context, finish notes, and routine placement.
Moisturizer Texture, comfort, seasonal use, and layering notes help explain why a product stayed or left a routine.
Cleanser Morning, evening, makeup removal, and post-workout use can all change how a cleanser is remembered.
Serum and treatment Targeted products need extra context: frequency, pauses, comfort notes, and products used around them.

How to log a product professionally

A good product log should be simple enough to maintain and detailed enough to be useful. Start with the product name and brand, then add category, first-use date, routine step, frequency, and a short note. When you take a photo, connect it to the entry rather than treating it as a standalone before-and-after image.

For example, a sunscreen entry might include the product name, SPF category, morning routine placement, whether it was worn under makeup, how it felt by the afternoon, and whether the same product was used consistently during a Glow Chain. A cleanser entry might include whether it was used once or twice daily, whether makeup removal was involved, and whether the rest of the routine changed at the same time.

What Revealog should not claim

Cosmetic and dermocosmetic products sit inside a careful claims environment. In the European Union, Regulation (EC) No 1223/2009 sets the core framework for cosmetic products, while Regulation (EU) No 655/2013 defines common criteria for cosmetic product claims. For a tracking app, the safest and most honest position is simple: record what the user did, do not promise what a product will do.

This is why Revealog content avoids medical language such as diagnosing, treating, curing, or preventing conditions. It also avoids ranking products as universally better or worse. The app helps users remember their own routine history; health decisions should stay with dermatologists, pharmacists, and other qualified professionals.

How this supports better skincare decisions

Better logging does not automatically mean better products. It means better memory. When a user has clear notes, dates, photos, and product context, they can notice patterns more responsibly: what changed, what stayed consistent, whether a product was used long enough to review, and whether other variables changed at the same time.

That kind of personal history is useful before buying again, before changing a routine, before discussing products with a professional, or before deciding that a product was never actually used consistently. Revealog makes that history easier to keep.

Sources and regulatory references

FAQ

Can I track products from different skincare brands in Revealog?

Yes. Revealog can be used to log products from different skincare, cosmetic, and dermocosmetic brands as part of a personal routine diary.

Are the listed brands official Revealog partners?

No. Brand names are used only to help users recognize products they personally track. Revealog is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by these brands unless explicitly stated.