The AUGUST Field Notes · Skin
Razor bumps aren't a skin problem. They're a four-mechanism problem. Most aftershaves treat one. Most treat none. Here is what a dermatologist would tell you — and what to put on your skin instead.

Curved, coarse hair curls back into the follicle after a close shave. The bump you feel is the hair growing sideways, not the shave itself.
AUGUST uses salicylic acid 2% to penetrate the follicle and glycolic acid 4% to exfoliate the surface — clearing the path so hair grows out, not in.
Pseudofolliculitis barbae is an inflammatory response — a bacterial and immune cascade under the skin.
Azelaic acid 10%, the single most evidence-backed PFB ingredient in dermatology, plus tea tree neutralize the cascade. Redness settles. The bump deflates.

The formula, if you're convinced

AUGUST
Alcohol-forward aftershaves strip the barrier, dehydrate the surface, and trigger more oil. Fragrance and essential oils compound the irritation.
AUGUST is engineered without any of it.

Post-inflammatory pigmentation is the second wound — dark spots left behind by every irritated follicle.
Niacinamide 5%, centella asiatica 2%, licorice root, and azelaic acid are formulated to support the look of an even, uniform tone over time.
Bumps are a maintenance problem, not a one-time fix. The men who clear their skin apply consistently — twice daily for the first fourteen days, then once daily.
Shave
Pat dry
2–3 pumps
Wait 60 seconds
Moisturize / SPF
Actives, named and dosed
From the AUGUST field notes

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AUGUST

Razor Bump Serum
from $39.99