Having a perfect skin is the dream of every
woman. Some women don’t mind spending their last cent just to keep the looks
stunning. Understanding your skin and applying some beauty tricks – like massaging
skin to prevent wrinkles – will actually save you some cent on cosmetics.
Mary Berry, 79, has near perfect skin; but
she doesn't use any face creams
‘I don’t have any beauty regime,’ she said in a recent interview. ‘I just
use one foundation, one powder, one lipstick. Why bother? I don’t use any
face creams at all.’Mary Berry, 79, has near perfect skin; but she doesn't use any face creams |
The very thought of going without moisturiser
almost brought me out in a rash, but I was intrigued that someone could forego
it entirely and not look craggier than a cliff face — not least because my own
skincare regime costs me dearly.’
There’s my two day moisturisers: Kiehl’s
Ultra Facial Oil-Free Lotion (£34) to tackle the oiliness around my T-zone, and
Elemis Pro-Collagen Marine Cream (£80), which promises to target signs of
ageing. Then a good eye cream: Boots No7 Youthful Eye Serum (£19.50), which I
pat on religiously every morning. At night, I add Elizabeth Arden Eight Hour Cream
(£26), to soothe dryness.
In all, my moisturisers cost me close to £160
every four months. That alone was enough to entice me to put Mary’s method to
the test. For a month I decided to pack all my potions away and, after washing
with Liz Earle Cleanse & Polish (£13.25) cleanser morning and night, do
nothing else.
Of course, I’m concerned any savings will
come at the expense of irreversible skin damage. And, at 40, that’s a risk I
can scarce afford.
The average woman will spend £18,000 on
skincare in a lifetime but, deep down, I suspect we all know that no amount can
really stop the ravages of time.
And, of course, I wondered if all my unguents
were actually making my skin worse.
‘We tend to overcomplicate skincare,’ says
cosmetic dermatologist Dr Sam Bunting. ‘Men often do little more than splash
water on their face; by comparison, women often create problems by embracing
trends that don’t necessarily suit their skin type.’
My month-long trial would begin with a test
to assess the condition of my skin, then another one four weeks later to assess
any change.
At London’s Cosmetic Imaging Studio, Nicolas
Miedzianowski-Sinclair uses a Visia device to analyse my skin for sun damage,
wrinkles, redness and pore size.
It’s a mixed bag: my wrinkles are good for my
age, but my moisture levels are low (galling considering all that time and
money) and my pores and redness are particularly bad. But it is the fact the
machine says I have UV damage — the thing that ages skin most drastically —
that alarms me the most.
I’m dreading the month ahead.
Kathryn when she was still using face creams |
For the first week, I sorely miss my
moisturisers. After every wash, my skin feels tight and flaky.
But by midweek, I realise my foundation has
much greater staying power and my skin is staying matte for longer. Still, I
dread the tightness that appears after the smallest splash of water — so I
avoid washing it off for as long as possible.
The sensation makes me super-aware of my
skin. I’m used to carrying on with my day without giving my face a second
thought, but without moisturiser I can concentrate on little else.
On the Monday of the second week I meet a
friend for lunch. I recoil as she examines my face. ‘I can’t see any
differences,’ she mutters. ‘Maybe I can ditch the creams, too?
However, the tightness has been joined by an angry community of spots on my
chin — Sam says this can be common on first giving up moisturiser as skin
produces excess oil to compensate.
After three weeks my skin feels a little
rougher. My make-up now sits on newly formed outcrops of dry skin on my cheeks
and around my nose. But otherwise I’m pleasantly surprised — my skin looks
clearer and creamier, and I’ve even started to forget about the tightness.
I also stop worrying that people can tell, as
if going without moisturiser is some dark secret. After all, it’s so ingrained
in our routine that to say you skip it is tantamount to saying you don’t care
about your appearance.
At last, when the month is up I race to my
second consultation with Nicolas, safe in the knowledge that as soon as I get
home I can bathe myself in Elemis. I expect to be told that my skin is wizened
and damaged in some way, but I’m shocked by the results.
Kathryn after a month of not using face creams |
Some, I was expecting; he can immediately see
the skin damage from a spell in the sun during the first week, when I forgot I
wasn’t wearing my SPF-containing cream.
My skin also has around 10 per cent less
moisture and the wrinkles around my eyes have deepened. I can live with dry
skin, but wrinkles are something I’ve spent money on trying to avoid — though Nicolas
assures me these should plump back up with a good eye cream.
There are, however, some surprising benefits.
The redness has dramatically reduced and my pores are ten times less visible —
a clear reversal of a key sign of ageing.
Sam tells me that the tightness I felt after
washing was because my cleanser was too harsh, disrupting the skin’s natural
barrier. That’s easily solved by using a cream cleanser and a flannel. I now
use Eve Taylor Clear Cleanse (£19.99).
‘Creams also plump up wrinkles, making them
less obvious, but they won’t stop them forming,’ Sam says. ‘The reduction of
pores may be down to them being clogged by creams. Most people just need good
sun protection, which has moisturising properties itself.
‘All women should apply healthy scepticism
when deciding if a product’s claims are plausible,’ she adds. ‘What we do know
is that a product as simple as an inexpensive moisturiser can improve the
appearance of fine lines and that many “anti-ageing” creams are doing little
more than that.’
I’ve come to the conclusion that my
moisturiser buying has been hugely influenced by fear. Fear of looking old,
fear of flakiness.
Now I see past the beauty companies’ spin I
know exactly what my face needs — a decent SPF (which will keep tightness at
bay, too) and an eye cream to keep those wrinkles plumped. But that’s it.
And at £15.50 for both, my bank balance, as
well as my skin, is already thanking me.
Source: UK Dailymail
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