A Travel Kit That Will Actually Fit in a Cabin Bag
Six items or fewer. Decanted where possible. Nothing glass, nothing breakable, nothing new to skin.
The six-item rule
Start with a plain reading of the heading: the six-item rule. What that means in practice — for a customer choosing a product or starting a routine — is less theatrical than marketing usually implies, and more useful.
None of this is a medical promise. It is the craft of making a formula feel right on skin, and making a routine one can actually keep.
What to decant, what to sachet
Start with a plain reading of the heading: what to decant, what to sachet. What that means in practice — for a customer choosing a product or starting a routine — is less theatrical than marketing usually implies, and more useful.
We've learned to describe this with care — what we say in marketing and what we say in a lab notebook aren't always the same, and the customer deserves the lab version.
Airports are not the place to experiment
Start with a plain reading of the heading: airports are not the place to experiment. What that means in practice — for a customer choosing a product or starting a routine — is less theatrical than marketing usually implies, and more useful.
The practical test is simple: pick it up tomorrow, and the day after. Something that lasts a week outlasts something that only looks good in a photo.
In closing
We'll keep writing. If there is a topic you'd like us to cover, write to info@rewyne.com — we read everything.
Read next: more REWYNE journal essays. Ready to shop? Browse the full edit.





