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Three drops on my fingertip after cleansing, and the serum vanishes before I finish tying my hair. That speed mattered on work mornings in Bhubaneswar, where the humidity sits heavy by eight. Anything slow-absorbing turns your face into an oil film under sunscreen.
I picked up the Minimalist serum combo in February 2026. Vitamin C 10% for mornings, Niacinamide 10% for nights. I chose the smaller 10 ml bottles specifically so the Vitamin C would not oxidise before I could finish them. Three months in, both are still in my daily vitamin C niacinamide routine.
The Vitamin C has not turned orange, and the Niacinamide runs out faster than expected. My skin looks less tired than it did when late-night deadlines were eating every hour of rest. This is not a miracle set. But it delivered what I needed: a clean AM/PM system that holds up in eastern Indian heat without pilling or stinging.
The Minimalist serum combo pairs a stable 10% Vitamin C (ethyl ascorbic acid) for mornings with 10% Niacinamide plus zinc for nights. After eight weeks, skin texture smoothed out and oil stayed controlled through Odisha humidity.
This post contains an affiliate link. KapdeWali may earn a small commission at no cost to you. — Soumya
The Minimalist serum combo runs two complementary formulas: a stable Vitamin C derivative for daytime antioxidant protection and a Matmarine-boosted Niacinamide for evening oil control. At ₹465 for both 10 ml bottles, you are paying for two distinct, high-concentration actives — not one diluted blend.
The Vitamin C serum is built around 10% 3-O-Ethyl Ascorbic Acid. This derivative's ethyl group, bonded to the molecule's third carbon, keeps it stable in heat and humidity. On skin, it converts to ascorbic acid with 86% pure Vitamin C content — well above the 40–50% typical of other derivatives. That is why the serum stayed clear through three months in Odisha's May heat.
Gluconolactone, a polyhydroxy acid, gently resurfaces dead skin cells without the low-pH sting of glycolic acid. Centella Asiatica water forms the base. Sodium Hyaluronate holds moisture while the Vitamin C works.
The theory that vitamin C and niacinamide cancel each other out comes from a 1960s study using conditions no modern formulation matches. With Ethyl Ascorbic Acid as the Vitamin C form, that instability concern is gone. Using them at separate times — morning and night — removes the debate and lets each active work at full capacity. Harper's Bazaar India's recent piece on the skinimalism shift makes the same case: fewer, better-targeted products consistently outperform crowded routines.
At 10%, Niacinamide interrupts melanosome transfer between pigment cells and skin cells — addressing dark spots at the source, not the surface. What distinguishes this formula is Matmarine, a Pseudoalteromonas ferment extract absent from most budget niacinamide serums. It targets sebum at a separate pathway from zinc, which reads as a softer matte finish by late afternoon in Bhubaneswar.
"The Niacinamide is slightly more viscous — that brief grip at the surface tells you the formula is actually working, not just absorbing."
Dual zinc — Zinc PCA and Zinc Glycinate — adds antibacterial action and secondary oil regulation. Allantoin closes the formula by soothing whatever the actives have stirred.

| Ingredient | Strength | What it does | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ethyl Ascorbic Acid | 10% | Converts to Vitamin C; blocks pigment formation, supports collagen | Stable in Indian heat — bottle stays clear, not orange |
| Gluconolactone (PHA) | Supporting | Gently resurfaces dead skin cells | No sting; sensitive skin and beginners tolerate it well |
| Niacinamide | 10% | Interrupts pigment transfer; tightens pores; regulates oil | Works on dark spots and excess shine simultaneously |
| Matmarine | Biotechnological | Reduces sebum production at a separate pathway from zinc | Absent from most budget serums — explains the softer matte by afternoon |
| Zinc PCA + Zinc Glycinate | Dual | Antibacterial; secondary oil regulation | Two zinc forms cover more territory than one alone |
By the time the dropper is back in the bottle, the Vitamin C serum has already gone. It spreads on contact with the warmth of the fingertip and there is no deliberate patting required. In Bhubaneswar before the rains, when the air sits humid and still before seven in the morning, that absorption speed is not a product virtue. It is the requirement.
Every layering guide will tell you to combine vitamin C and niacinamide in one step. My skin refused. Used in sequence within the same routine, they pilled under my moisturiser and left a faint flushing I couldn't trace to anything else. Twelve hours apart — Vitamin C at six in the morning, Niacinamide at ten at night — both work without incident. The split is not a workaround. It is how this system is designed to be used.
On long deadline nights in Bhubaneswar, I have skipped the PM Niacinamide entirely. The next morning, the T-zone oil came in heavier by ten, and the skin at my nose had gone slightly rough to the touch. Two missed nights registers — not dramatically, but measurably. Consistency matters more than any single application.
A gentle, pH-balanced face wash — nothing stripping.
The Vitamin C absorbs more evenly on a skin barrier that hasn't been scraped raw by a foaming cleanser.
2–3 drops on fingertips. Tap from the centre outward.
Rubbing wastes product — the warmth of the hand distributes the serum before any friction is needed.
Thirty seconds — not five minutes.
The watery formula sinks before you finish capping the bottle. Still wet after sixty seconds means one drop too many.
Apply a light lotion while skin still feels faintly present.
In Odisha's humidity, skipping this step sounds logical until midday, when the skin pulls tight under air-conditioning.
Non-negotiable. Every morning, without exception.
Vitamin C increases photosensitivity. Without sunscreen, the antioxidant is undone by the same UV it is trying to fight.
Remove SPF and the day with a gentle wash.
Applying Niacinamide over sunscreen residue blunts the effect — a clean surface is what the serum needs.
2–3 drops, tapped lightly across the face.
The brief tacky grip takes sixty to ninety seconds to settle. Rushing it with a moisturiser immediately causes pilling.
A light lotion or gel-cream only — not a heavy night cream.
Heavy creams pill with Niacinamide. This is a layering error, not a product flaw. A lighter formula solves it entirely.

The whole system takes under three minutes on each end of the day. That brevity is the point. For a vitamin C niacinamide routine to show results over eight weeks, it needs to actually happen — which means it cannot be elaborate enough to skip on a tired evening.
For more active ingredient guides and skincare routine breakdowns, browse the KapdeWali Beauty Care section.
Yes — with one condition that is not optional. Daily SPF is required; without it, UV damage accumulates faster than the Vitamin C can address it, and results will stay invisible regardless of how consistent the rest of the routine is.
The honest limitation this set carries is one of timeline. The Vitamin C reduces dullness and helps fade post-breakout marks over weeks, not days. At the three-month mark, two persistent dark spots from a bad skin week in March have faded by roughly half — lighter under natural light in a way I can confirm with a press of the fingertip against the surrounding skin. They are not erased. Anyone expecting a professional peel result in a fortnight will be disappointed.
The dropper mechanism on both bottles becomes temperamental near the bottom — getting the final few drops requires holding the bottle inverted and waiting. The 10 ml Niacinamide runs out in approximately six weeks at daily PM use, which means you are buying a replacement before the Vitamin C bottle empties. Not a dealbreaker, but a real friction that a slightly larger bottle would solve.
At ₹465 for both serums, this set sits below what a single 30 ml Vitamin C from Deconstruct costs (₹599), and well below buying a full-size Minimalist Vitamin C 30 ml plus a separate Niacinamide 30 ml. The value is in getting two distinct high-concentration actives in sizes that finish before they degrade — which is precisely the problem the travel-size format solves for anyone who has watched a Vitamin C serum turn orange before reaching the halfway mark.
Yes, because it uses Ethyl Ascorbic Acid — a Vitamin C derivative stable enough to survive Indian humidity and heat without browning in the bottle. The Centella Asiatica base and PHA support keep it gentle for Indian skin types, which are often more sensitised than the conditions European serums are formulated for. For combination to oily skin in a humid climate, this is one of the more considered budget vitamin C niacinamide routine options available under ₹500.
Plan for eight weeks minimum before making a call. Based on three months of daily use, this is what the timeline actually looked like:

| Product | Price | What it covers | What it misses |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimalist Serum Combo (10 ml × 2) | ₹465 | AM brightening + PM oil control in one set | 10 ml runs out fast; heavy moisturiser users will pill |
| The Ordinary Niacinamide 10% + Zinc (30 ml) | ~₹590 | Reliable oil control, good value per ml | No Vitamin C — need a separate brightening serum |
| Deconstruct Vitamin C & Ferulic Acid (30 ml) | ~₹599 | Strong brightening with ferulic acid stability | No Niacinamide — oil control not addressed |
These two serums address different problems at different hours — one protecting during the day, one repairing at night. The compounding effect is what makes this a system rather than two standalone products. Neither bottle alone would have done what both together delivered over three months.
What surprised me most about this set was how little it surprised me. No oxidation, no irritation, no dramatic first-week revelation. The Vitamin C serum stayed clear. The Niacinamide kept the T-zone quiet. Skin that looked flat and tired at 10 PM started looking like it had actually rested. It took about four weeks to notice and another four to confirm.
The Ordinary's Niacinamide is cheaper per millilitre. Deconstruct's Vitamin C is more potent. This combo wins if you need both actives, want them stable, and would rather test them in 10 ml before committing to 30 ml bottles that might turn orange before you finish them.
The Minimalist serum combo does not make promises it cannot keep — which, for a sub-₹500 skincare set, is already unusual. After three months in Bhubaneswar's heat and humidity, my skin is less dull, my T-zone is better behaved, and the Vitamin C stayed clear to the last drop. Results compound slowly. If you give it time and pair it with SPF, it earns its place.
"The Niacinamide runs out before the Vitamin C, the dropper struggles at the bottom of both bottles, and heavy night cream users will pill — none of which is a formulation flaw, but all of which are real friction."
Four out of five: dependable, honest, and built for the long game rather than the quick fix.

Minimalist Serum Combo
Vitamin C 10% + Niacinamide 10% · 10 ml each · Fragrance-free · Dermatologically tested
₹465 on Myntra
Shop the Minimalist Serum ComboAffiliate disclosure: This link is a KapdeWali affiliate link. If you purchase through it, I earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I bought and tested this set with my own money over three months. My opinion is my own. — Soumya Smruti Sahoo
Three months in, it is still the first thing I reach for in the morning and the last thing I apply at night. That is probably the most honest verdict I can give.
Yes, because modern formulations using Ethyl Ascorbic Acid (not pure L-ascorbic acid) are stable enough to work alongside niacinamide without cancelling each other out. That said, applying them at separate times — Vitamin C in the morning and Niacinamide at night — eliminates any risk of pilling and lets each active operate without interference.
Yes, because both serums in this set actively address oiliness. The Niacinamide at 10% regulates sebum production, and Matmarine — a marine-derived bioactive in the formula — targets sebum at a separate pathway from zinc. After four weeks of daily PM use, T-zone oil was noticeably reduced by late afternoon in Bhubaneswar's humidity.
Daily use is what this set is designed for: Vitamin C every morning after cleansing, Niacinamide every evening after the PM cleanse. Both 10 ml bottles are sized to finish within six to eight weeks at that frequency, which keeps the Vitamin C potent and prevents oxidation before the bottle runs out.
Yes, but gradually — not overnight. At 10% Ethyl Ascorbic Acid, this serum fades post-breakout marks and reduces dullness over eight to twelve weeks of consistent daily use with SPF. Older, deeper-set hyperpigmentation will take longer and may need a higher-concentration treatment used alongside it.
Yes, because the fragrance-free, non-comedogenic formula is gentle enough for first-time active users, and the 10 ml bottles let you trial both serums before committing to full-size purchases. The one non-negotiable for beginners: pair the Vitamin C with SPF 50+ every morning. Results depend on it more than any other step.
Affiliate link — KapdeWali earns a small commission at no cost to you. — Soumya