Dr. Barbara Sturm The Peptide Serum: Review with Photos
ulhmts on 25 April, 2025 | No Comments
Collage: Paula Balondo; Source images: Courtesy of Allure editor and brandsSave this storySave this story
If you’ve ever proclaimed your skin as “reactive,” “irritated,” or simply quick to act up, you’re not the only one. Up to 71% of adults worldwide report some level of skin sensitivity, and while it’s not exactly a clinical diagnosis, it’s a very real lived experience. Mine tends to manifest as redness, the occasional surprise hives, and general itchiness when I get too experimental. So when I came across Dr. Barbara Sturm’s The Peptide Serum and spotted the word peptides, my ears perked up. Not because peptides are the buzziest ingredient right now (though they are), but since they’re made up of short chains of amino acids your skin already recognizes, it’s less likely your skin will freak out over them.
Spoiler alert: I didn’t exactly pace myself—I went straight in, and somehow my sensitive skin was fully on board. But don’t let the gentle reputation fool you; peptides are still putting in hard work. Here’s how it played out for me.
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Dr. Barbara Sturm
The Peptide Serum
Bluemercury
First Off, What Are Peptides?
“Peptides are strands of amino acids that act as messengers, telling skin cells what to do,” says Omer Ibrahim, MD, a board-certified dermatologist based in Chicago. If your reactive skin has ever been personally offended by retinol (same), peptides offer a gentler way in. “They can stimulate collagen like retinol, just with far less irritation,” says Dr. Ibrahim. In practice, that means signaling your skin to ramp up collagen production, slow its breakdown, and support how it repairs itself over time—all things sensitive skin tends to appreciate, adds Maryam Safaee, MD, a board-certified dermatologist based in Los Angeles.
Allure contributing commerce writer Christa Joanna Lee holding the Dr. Barbara Sturm The Peptide Serum
Christa Joanna Lee
A Closer Look at the Formula
Dr. Barbara Sturm’s formula doesn’t rely on just one peptide. Are you ready? You’ve got acetyl octapeptide-3 and hexapeptide-3, often referred to as “neurotransmitter-inhibiting” peptides, which help limit muscle contractions so, over time, expression lines look a little softer. As Dr. Ibrahim explains, “they work similarly in concept to Botox by dialing down the intensity of repeated facial movements.” Then there’s palmitoyl pentapeptide-4 (a.k.a. Matrixyl), a longtime staple that signals fibroblasts to produce more collagen and elastin. Rounding things out, acetyl-tetrapeptide-2 and decapeptide-4 “support collagen production and act a bit like growth factors, encouraging overall skin repair,” adds Dr. Ibrahim.
Lee applying the Dr. Barbara Sturm The Peptide Serum
Christa Joanna Lee
Then there are supporting ingredients, including amino acids—glycine, proline, and arginine—which, as Dr. Safaee explains, “are essential building blocks of collagen itself.” In other words, peptides tell the skin what to make; amino acids make it happen.
And importantly, the formula doesn’t forget about hydration: Hyaluronic acid, glycerin, and a mix of oils and butters keep the barrier intact. Because, as Dr. Ibrahim points out, “there’s no point in stimulating collagen if your skin barrier is too compromised to function properly.”
First Impressions
It’s more milky than I expected from a serum, but it makes sense once you look at the formula: As mentioned, there are water-binding humectants like glycerin and hyaluronic acid, but also emollients and lipids—think shea butter, sunflower oil, almond oil, and vitamin E—suspended into that base. That combination gives it that softly opaque, almost lotion-like look.
Lee applying the Dr. Barbara Sturm’s The Peptide Serum
Christa Joanna Lee
How I Used It
I worked this into my morning and evening routines, right after cleansing and before moisturizer. The first time I used it, I noticed the faintest hint of tightness as it dried down—nothing off-putting, just something I clocked—but it disappeared completely after that. From then on, it settled in seamlessly. Three weeks in, the fragrance-free formula kept things completely calm without tingling, redness, or surprise reactions (cue: sigh of relief).
At night, it slips easily under moisturizer; in the morning, it layers smoothly with sunscreen and makeup without pilling (just let it dry for a minute or two), which already puts it ahead of a number of serums in this category. It’s the kind of formula you don’t have to overthink. And don’t get me wrong—when you have sensitive skin, that kind of low-maintenance ease is the dream.
The Results
Let’s level-set expectations: This isn’t a wake-up-transformed-overnight situation (skin care rarely is). But within a couple of weeks, my skin felt noticeably calmer—less redness, smoother texture, and overall more quenched. And considering this all happened during that awkward winter-to-spring in-between (complete with seasonal allergies and a brutal cold), it had a lot working against it.
Lee applying the Dr. Barbara Sturm The Peptide Serum
Christa Joanna Lee
Lee after applying the Dr. Barbara Sturm The Peptide Serum
Christa Joanna Lee
That lines up with what Dr. Ibrahim told me: “Usually improved hydration and texture can be seen within two to four weeks when using peptides, while reduced fine lines and improved firmness and elasticity may take up to six months.” He also pointed out something worth keeping in mind—peptides are doing real work, just not always in a dramatic, immediate way. “Peptides stimulate collagen production like retinol, albeit with less potential irritation, [but] the results are not as fast.”
Dr. Barbara Sturm The Peptide Serum displayed on a silk sheet
Christa Joanna Lee
Peptides work on a slower, steadier timeline, but the payoff is there if you stick with it. I’m curious to see how it handles the fine lines around my upper cheeks and eyes over the next few months. If your skin tends to prefer a gentle nudge over a full-on push, this one gets it.
Save to wishlist
Dr. Barbara Sturm
The Peptide Serum
Bluemercury
Meet the experts
- Omer Ibrahim, MD, a board-certified dermatologist and founder of Salmalita Cosmetics, based in Chicago
- Maryam Safaee, MD, a board-certified dermatologist based in Los Angeles




