Posts Tagged ‘CREAMS’

Make-Up Tips To Help Skin Look Younger

 

No one can turn back the clock, but the way you apply your make-up and the kind of make-up you use can go a long way in making your skin look younger. Once you’ve accomplished the basics for healthy skin on the inside – healthy diet, plenty of water, and regular exercise – you can consider these make-up techniques to help your skin look younger.

 1. Creams, Not Powders

 Young girls often pat on a lot of powder, whether it’s pressed powder or blush. Sometimes, young women do this to absorb oil and reduce shine. But as your skin ages, a certain amount of “shine” is considered good. A luminous, translucent look can help bring back the moisture-rich look of youth (that you used to cover up with powder!).

 Another reason for using cream blushes, eye shadows, and other make-up is that is will be less likely to settle into wrinkles and lines on your face. When powders fill in these facial lines, it can make them stand out and look like cracks. Creams have a more smoothing effect.

 2. If You Do Use Powder… 

 Make-up artists and other professionals recommend using a soft, fluffy brush to apply powder to aging skin rather than the pads that come with pressed powder. Loose powder blushes, face powder, and bronzers work best with a brush and tend to have a more translucent quality than pressed powder. Also, powders with “shimmer” or luminescence are said to be a good choice for older skin.

 3. Moisturizer

 To achieve a “dewy” look to the skin and to plump up wrinkled areas, moisturizer under your make-up is considered essential. You can also look for commercially prepared moisturizer that is tinted, so it acts as a light foundation and moisturizer in one.

 4. Think “Light”

 When it comes to applying make-up to mature skin, the days of heavy, caked foundation, blush, and mascara are over. Light coverage is the way to go these days, using such items as translucent, low-pigment foundation and translucent face powder. Experts recommend going a shade lighter than your skin tone when choosing foundation and concealer. If you add color and depth in the form of a bronzer or blush, choose warm, light colors.

 5. Lips

 If you use lipstick, it’s recommended that you use a lip liner. This is to help prevent the formation of “feathers” at the edges of your mouth. These fine lines can cause your lipstick to “bleed” up into them, looking wrinkled and aged. Choose lip liner that is basically the same shade as your lipstick.

The facts about your dry skin

Skin needs moisture to be smooth and supple, but retaining moisture is not always easy. Dry skin, also called xerosis, is a very common problem although it is not usually a serious issue.

Factors which contribute to dry and cracked skin include:

• Inherited factors.

• Metabolic factors such as an underactive thyroid gland, or excessive weight loss

• Increasing age, resulting in decreased natural lubrication.

• Cool weather, especially when windy.

• Air conditioning.

• Excessive bathing, showering or swimming, especially in strongly chlorinated hot or cold water.

• Contact with soap, detergents and solvents.

• Frictional irritation and chapping.

Chronic or severe dry skin problems do exist and may require a dermatologist’s advice; however, for mild cases of xerosis there are steps that can be taken to improve the skin’s condition. Locate The fact that we may have oily facial skin does not mean that the rest of us is as lucky.

Dry skin is most common on the (lower) legs, arms, flanks (sides of the abdomen) and thighs. Identify these dry areas and embark on a plan to remedy their condition. Showering & bathing Hot water dries the skin, so try to use lukewarm water when showering and bathing. It is also a good idea to limit the time you spend in the shower to a minimum. Bathing will provide your skin with moisture temporarily, but it removes the skin’s oily lipid layer and in the end causes more moisture loss than gain.

Avoid rubbing the skin too harshly with sponges or washcloths and when towelling, do not rub the skin. Instead, blot or pat dry so there is still some moisture left on the surface. Next, apply a moisturizer. Products Stay away from harsh soaps that dry the skin.

Recommended (bar) soaps are Dove, Olay and Basis. Even better than soap are skin cleanser lotions such as Cetaphil Lotion or Oilatum. When moisturising, water-based products are best cosmetically, however oil-based creams are more effective in trapping moisture. If you have very dry skin, apply oil to the still moist skin, then apply a moisturizing cream at bedtime.

Dry skin can sometimes feel and look patchy – if you have pigmentation issues, at sites like Skin Lightening Advice you’ll find the best skin lightening cream articles, guidance and information.

Protect all areas when exposed to the sun, such as the face, ears, hands and back of the neck should have a moisturiser containing sun block or a sunscreen of SPF 30 applied daily.

Laundry For laundry, try using non-biological washing powder or liquid and avoid using fabric softeners, especially in the dryer. Keep irritating fabrics away from your skin. Do not wear wool clothing or other ‘scratchy’ fabrics and use good quality cotton percale sheets on your bed. If you feel itchy without a visible rash or if dryness and itching are preventing you from sleeping you should consult your physician. Additionally, if you have any open cuts or sores from scratching or if your home care measures do not relieve your dryness and itching, you should definitively seek medical advice.

Blemishes, rosacea and age spots are some of the most common signs of aging. Thanks to modern laser treatments, there is an easy, effective treatment available to nearly everyone! Visit Healthy Skin Portal find a skin care doctor and to learn more about IPL Photofacial, laser skin resurfacing, and other anti-aging skin care treatments.