Rhode's pimple patches, designed by Justin Bieber, are finally here
Justin Bieber co-designed Rhode's first-ever pimple patches in five shapes, including a daisy nod to his own song. The three-piece capsule drops April 13.

The daisy shape on Rhode's new Spotwear pimple patches is not accidental. Justin Bieber co-designed all five patch shapes for the collection, and that particular nod to his own catalog makes the "Rhode x The Biebers" capsule feel less like a celebrity beauty drop and more like a piece of wearable lore for anyone who grew up with his music.
Hailey Bieber's brand announced the three-product capsule on April 6, timed to Justin's headlining appearances at Coachella on April 11 and 18 in Indio, California. The collection goes live April 13 exclusively on rhodeskin.com.
Spotwear marks Rhode's first entry into the pimple patch category. Each patch is made from 100% hydrocolloid material, clinically proven to minimize the appearance of blemishes by absorbing excess oil, and the formula is both waterproof and sweatproof. The five shapes Justin designed — bubble, shroom, curve, jelly bean, and daisy — are clearly built for the festival circuit, where functional skincare and personal style have been colliding since Starface made stars a beauty statement. A single-design pack of 36 patches retails for $28; a full bundle runs $126.
The patches are also a personal reference point: the drop nods explicitly to Justin's own history with acne as a teenager, which gives Spotwear a biographical angle most pimple patch launches can't claim.

Rounding out the capsule are two limited-edition products in a coordinated banana theme: the Peptide Lip Treatment in Caramelized Banana ($35) and the Peptide Eye Prep in Banana Peel ($43). Both are seasonal spins on Rhode's existing hero formats, positioned squarely for the same spring and summer audience the patches are chasing.
As a gift, the Spotwear set sits at a price point that makes it easy to grab without overthinking — small enough to tuck into a birthday bag, specific enough to feel considered. For a beauty-obsessed friend, a younger sister heading to festival season, or a partner who follows Rhode's every drop, the combination of Justin's design fingerprints and the Coachella timing makes this feel like a cultural object as much as a skincare product. Rhode has consistently built its packaging to photograph well on skin, and these patches, in particular, seem engineered for exactly that purpose.
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