Picking Ingredients in Skincare Products

Picking Ingredients in Skincare Products

How to Pick the Best Ingredients in Your Skincare Products

The beauty industry has everything from diminish wrinkles to clear up acne, but all of the products with their ingredients are enough to leave a glamour girl's head spinning. Some are derived from nature and others a chemist's test tube, but what exactly do they do to make us more beautiful? Inquiring minds would like to know.


Always remember that although many countries mandate that cosmetic companies disclose their ingredients, the claims they make regarding results go largely unregulated. Companies include ingredients that have been proven to promote a certain action, but they do not always include them in the amount, or in conjunction with the compounds that render them most effective.

To sure to read the labels. For example, zit zapping lotions, you're likely to find ingredients like salicylic acid (or beta hydroxy acid), benzoyl peroxide, tea tree oil, triclosan, sulfur or zinc. The acid promotes cellular exfoliation, which inhibits pore clogging debris, while the other ingredients act to combat bacteria or ease inflammation. 
Keep in mind that vitamin A, and its derivatives, retinol or retinoids, encourage deep cellular turnover and are believed to reveal new, unwrinkled skin. Vitamin C, as well as CO Q-10, are thought to promote collagen and elastin production, thereby giving skin the ability to defy wrinkles. 
Consider that some acids, including alpha hydroxy (or AHA) and lactic, as well as papaya are included in products to promote exfoliation, or removal the most superficial layers of your skin. Any oil, butter or lipid, as well as glycerin and petrolatum will moisturize your skin. 
When buying a good sunscreen always check labels for titanium dioxide, zinc oxide, oxybenzone, avobenzone or padimate-O (PABA) to confirm that your chosen a good product.
Also, many ingredients lend the beauty products a pleasant texture and long life. Parabens are common preservatives, cetyl and stearyl alcohols are thickening agents, and isopropyl myristate and lanolate give many potions their creamy consistency. 


Tips:
• Consult the manufacturer for complete disclosure on a product's ingredients and their intended actions. 
• Ingredients are listed in order of concentration. Ignore any cream that includes its miracle ingredients at the end of the list, as they'll be significantly less effective. 
• All skins are different, and no product offers the same results.
• Test products whenever possible, as many modern products have ingredients that may irritate certain skins.


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