The chemistry of makeup failure at high humidity
Makeup products are fundamentally emulsions — oil-in-water or water-in-oil systems held together by surfactant molecules at the interface. At humidity levels above 75%, three degradation mechanisms accelerate simultaneously. First, osmotic water absorption: hygroscopic ingredients in makeup (glycerin, propylene glycol, certain pigments) absorb atmospheric moisture, swelling the product film on the face and disrupting pigment distribution — this manifests as "patchiness" and colour shift. Second, surfactant destabilisation: the emulsifier system holding oil and water phases together has a limited capacity. When external water (humidity and sweat) infiltrates the product film, it overwhelms the emulsifier, causing phase separation — visible as "sliding" or "melting" foundation. Third, bacterial and fungal proliferation: warm, moist conditions on the skin surface accelerate microbial growth in deposited makeup. A 2024 study found that cosmetic sponges and brushes used in monsoon conditions harboured 4-8 times more bacterial colony-forming units than the same tools used in dry conditions. This has direct implications for acne-prone users who may experience monsoon-specific breakouts from contaminated application tools rather than the products themselves. Product storage is equally important — makeup stored in humid bathrooms degrades 40% faster than products stored in cool, dry environments.