Sujaenara
Sujaenara is a Korean brand built around single-ingredient skincare materials: pure actives like acetyl hexapeptide and galactomyces ferment, carrier oils and butters such as camellia oil and shea butter, and botanical powders made from perilla, mung bean, and grain herbs. These are the raw materials people reach for when they want to mix their own masks, dilute an active to the strength their skin can handle, or add a clean booster to a serum they already own. We list 29+ Sujaenara items, from 10ml active vials to 500ml oils and dry-sheet compression masks. If you prefer to know exactly what goes on your face, this is the part of the catalog where you choose each component yourself.
By Skinsli editorial Updated
Buying guide
Sujaenara buying guide: how to choose single-ingredient skincare materials
Sujaenara sells the building blocks of skincare rather than finished creams. The catalog runs from pure active vials to large bottles of plant oil and bags of botanical powder, so the first question is never "which product" but "which ingredient, at what strength, for what step." This guide walks through the formats we list, what each material does, and how to fold it into a routine you already have.
What Sujaenara actually sells
Most of the 29+ items here are single ingredients, not blended formulas. You will see actives sold on their own, such as acetyl hexapeptide in a small 10ml vial and galactomyces ferment in a 100ml bottle. Alongside those sit carrier oils and butters like camellia oil and shea butter, and dry botanical powders ground from perilla, mung bean, and grain herbs. The idea is that you combine these yourself, so you control concentration and know every component that touches your skin.
The single actives: peptides, ferment, and hyaluronic acid
The active vials are the most concentrated things in the range. Acetyl hexapeptide is a peptide many people add to a serum for fine-line support, and because it ships at 10ml you use it a few drops at a time. Galactomyces ferment filtrate is the watery essence ingredient familiar from Korean first-essence routines, sold here at 100ml so you can use it neat or blend it. Polymer hyaluronic acid in 100ml gives you a humectant base to thin down or mix into a gel. Treat all three as boosters: a little goes into a larger base, not straight onto bare skin at full strength.
Carrier oils and butters
Camellia oil and shea butter are the occlusive and emollient side of the catalog. Camellia oil comes in a generous 500ml bottle and is light enough to use as a finishing oil or to dilute a heavier active. Shea butter is listed in both 80g and 100ml sizes, which lets you pick a small tub to try as a balm or a larger one if you already make your own creams. These are the materials that seal moisture in and carry oil-soluble ingredients, so they usually sit at the end of a routine or as the fat phase of a homemade mix.
Botanical powders for masks and packs
The powders are dry botanicals you rehydrate before use. Perilla powder, mung bean powder, and a natural grain herbal powder are traditional Korean mask bases: you mix a spoonful with water, toner, or one of the actives above to make a fresh wash-off pack. Sizes run from 50g up to 100g, so a single bag lasts through many masks. Because they are dry, they keep well and let you make only as much as one sitting needs, which avoids the preservative question that comes with pre-mixed wet products.
Compression mask sheets
The compression mask pack is the one ready-to-use format in the line. These are dry, coin-sized compressed sheets that expand when you soak them in essence or toner. They pair naturally with the rest of the catalog: soak one in diluted galactomyces or a hyaluronic acid mix and you have a custom sheet mask with no added ingredients you did not choose. They store flat and take up almost no shelf space, which makes them an easy companion to the liquid actives.
How to choose by size and step
Match the size to how you plan to use the ingredient. Small formats such as the 10ml peptide vial or 80g shea tub are sensible first buys when you are testing how your skin reacts. Larger formats like the 500ml camellia oil or 100g powder bags are better once you know an ingredient suits you and you use it regularly. Think in terms of routine steps too: ferment and hyaluronic acid belong early as watery layers, oils and butters belong last as the seal, and powders are an occasional wash-off treatment rather than a daily step.
Mixing and patch-testing safely
Working with raw materials means you set the strength, so start low. Dilute an active into a base rather than applying it neat, mix powders fresh each time, and keep oils away from anything you want to stay water-light. Patch-test any new combination on your inner arm for a day or two before it goes on your face, especially with the peptide and ferment. Because nothing here carries a pre-set fragrance or filler, reactions are usually traceable to a single component, which is part of why people choose to formulate this way.
Korean sourcing and authenticity
Sujaenara is a Korean brand, and the materials we list are sourced as the brand supplies them. Single-ingredient skincare is a long-standing habit in Korea, where buying a plain ferment or a bag of perilla powder to make your own pack is ordinary rather than niche. We carry the line so you can buy these components directly instead of hunting them down individually, and every item ships from the same catalog you order the rest of your routine from.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
What kind of products does Sujaenara sell?
Sujaenara sells single-ingredient skincare materials rather than finished creams. The range covers pure actives like acetyl hexapeptide and galactomyces ferment, carrier oils and butters such as camellia oil and shea butter, dry botanical powders from perilla, mung bean, and grain herbs, and compression mask sheets. You combine these yourself to control what goes on your skin.
Can I use the acetyl hexapeptide or galactomyces vials on their own?
The galactomyces ferment can be used fairly close to neat as a first essence, but the acetyl hexapeptide is a concentrated peptide that you usually add in small amounts to a serum or base rather than applying at full strength. With any of the single actives, start with a few drops blended into something larger and build up only once you know your skin tolerates it.
How do I use the perilla, mung bean, and herbal powders?
The powders are dry botanicals you rehydrate just before use. Mix a spoonful with water, toner, or one of the liquid actives to make a fresh wash-off pack, apply it, then rinse after several minutes. Make only as much as one mask needs, since a freshly mixed powder pack has no preservatives. A 50g to 100g bag lasts through many sittings.
What is the Sujaenara compression mask pack?
The compression mask pack is a set of dry, compressed sheets that expand when you soak them in liquid. Drop one into diluted galactomyces, a hyaluronic acid mix, or plain toner and it becomes a custom sheet mask carrying only the ingredients you chose. The sheets store flat and pair naturally with the liquid actives in the rest of the line.
Should I buy the small or large size of a Sujaenara ingredient?
Start small when you are testing how an ingredient suits you, such as the 10ml peptide vial or the 80g shea butter tub. Move up to larger formats like the 500ml camellia oil or 100g powder bags once you know you use that ingredient regularly. Buying the smaller size first keeps waste down while you experiment.
Is Sujaenara a Korean brand and are the materials authentic?
Yes, Sujaenara is a Korean brand, and we list its single-ingredient materials as the brand supplies them. Buying a plain ferment or a bag of botanical powder to make your own pack is an ordinary habit in Korea. We carry the line so you can order these components directly alongside the rest of your routine.















