
Founded in 2019, Starface is a U.S.-based skincare startup best known for its bright, star-shaped hydrocolloid pimple patches called “Hydro-Stars.” Instead of hiding acne with invisible treatments, Starface made it visible, playful, and socially accepted.
The company’s mission is to normalize skin imperfections and turn acne care into something positive rather than shame-driven. In doing so, Starface transformed a basic dermatology product into a lifestyle and fashion-adjacent accessory embraced heavily by Gen Z.
Starface was founded by Julie Schott and Brian Bordainick, two entrepreneurs with backgrounds in media and consumer brands.
They identified a gap in the skincare market: acne products were functional but emotionally negative, often marketed with clinical or embarrassing messaging. Their idea was simple but disruptive—make acne care something people don’t want to hide.
By designing bright yellow star-shaped patches and pairing them with a fun, meme-driven brand identity, they flipped traditional skincare branding on its head.
Starface scaled quickly due to viral marketing and strong Gen Z adoption:
Starface operates as a direct-to-consumer + retail skincare brand with a strong lifestyle identity:
The product itself is simple, but the branding and community engagement are what drive scale.
Starface significantly changed how skincare brands approach acne:
It effectively created a new category: “expressive skincare.”
Despite strong growth, Starface faces key challenges:
The company responds by expanding product lines and leaning into collaborations with fashion and pop culture brands.
Starface is evolving from a single-product brand into a broader skincare and lifestyle company:
The long-term goal is to remain culturally relevant while scaling beyond a single viral product.
From a simple idea—making pimple patches fun—Starface became a cultural skincare brand powered by Gen Z identity and social media. By removing stigma from acne care and turning it into something expressive, the founders built more than a product—they built a movement.
Starface shows how modern startups don’t always need complex technology; sometimes, the biggest disruption comes from changing how people feel about everyday problems.









