
Social worker Nancy Ryan (Kathy Baker) visits the Glasses in their house to check if it’s a suitable place for two teenagers, Ruby and her brother Rhett, to live in. She opens the cabinet in Erin Glass’ bathroom and we can see some interesting products in it.

On the top shelf there are three bottles by Peter Thomas Roth. The blue one is the pre-treatment exfoliating cleanser; the pale blue and the pale pink bottles could contain another cleanser or/and a toning lotion.

Another product by the same brand can be seen on the bottom shelf, in a white jar with black lettering. Impossible to know exactly what it is because this packaging has been used for different products.


Earlier in the movie, the cabinet reveals a different story: the first time Erin (who’s a doctor) opens it, it’s packed with medicines. One of the few beauty products in it is Oil of Olay oil-free beauty fluid in a white bottle, a packaging that dates back to the early 1990s.
Thanks to Alessandra for submitting this post.
It’s Christmas time in Eureka, and Margie (Kathy Baker) and Freddy host a party for family and friends. During the party, Margie retouches Helena’s make-up and puts some perfume on her.
It’s not a spray bottle, the one that Margie takes out of her mirrored cabinet, but a splash one. The opaque glass flowers decorating the stopper are quite unmistakable.
When the girl finally holds the bottle, the mystery is finally revealed: it’s Chloé.
This romantic white floral perfume is a creation of Betty Busse. It was launched in 1975 under the label Parfums Lagerfeld, because Karl Lagerfeld was at the helm of the brand as main designer from 1966 to 1983.