2010 Beautéful You Resolution Week 2: Makeup Remover

Be good to your skin... Get that makeup off!

How’s your New Year’s resolution going?  Are you keeping up?  And I hope you have been taking good care of your skin with the simple steps of cleanse  ~>  tone ~> moisturize.

But sometimes the simple 3-step regiment is not enough.  “Sometimes” means whenever you wear makeup; and “makeup” means anything that’s not your skin care product: foundation, powder, eyeshadow, blush, eyeliner, lipstick, concealer, mascara, etc…

When you wear makeup, there’s an extra layer of gunk that your cleanser needs to get rid of.  If your cleanser cannot get all that dirt, oil, makeup and such off your face, it is as good as not washing your face at all.  And unfortunately most cleansers, at least the ones that don’t take a layer of skin off, fail to remove everything in one step.  And sometimes even the harsh cleansers still can’t get the job done… Continue reading

“Makeup and Breakout”

Magazine/Issue:  Allure / Body News (January 2006 issue, p.58) ~ by Kristin Cobb

 

Skin Experts often discourage women with acne from wearing makeup, but a new study shows that certain cosmetics can improve acne sufferers’ quality of life without aggravating their skin. Dermatology professor Nobukazu Hayashi and other researchers at Tokyo’s Women’s Medical University instructed 18 women to apply makeup formulated for blemish-prone skin (from a Japanese cosmetics line) as they began an acne treatment regimen. (Treatment, which varied by individual, consisted of oral antibiotics, topical antibiotics, chemical peels, or a combination of these.) After two to four weeks, the women in the study reported feeling more attractive and less embarrassed, anxious, and depressed, and despite the makeup, they had fewer breakouts than they had initially. Rather than covering acne with oil-based foundation, Hayashi recommends applying noncomedogenic makeup, which is designed not to clog pores.

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