Archive for the ‘Cosmetics’ Category

What is Microdermabrasion and How Does it Work?

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Microdermabrasion is is a cosmetic procedure made popular in day and medical spas. In addition, many cosmetic/plastic surgeons provide microdermabrasion as part of their practice.

Microdermabrasion uses light abrasion to remove the outermost layer of skin called the stratum corneum, which is primarily comprised of dead skin cells. This is a very common technique used to remove skin that has been damaged by the sun or skin that has been scarred in one way or another. Microdermabrasion can also lighten or remove dark spots on the skin. Microdermbrasion of scars works best when the scar is one that is raised slightly above the normal surface of the skin.

The microdermabrasion process is not a painful process… it does not require any form of anesthetic. There are several methods used to perform microdermabrasion. In the crystal microdermabrasion process, tiny crystals are blasted at high speed onto the face to exfoliate and reduce the outer layer of skin. Diamond microdermabrasion uses a small, diamond-tipped head to exfoliate the skin.

Microdermabrasion systems used to be the domain of private, expensive spas and cosmetic surgeons. Now, home microdermabrasion is an extremely effective and relatively inexpensive option. Home microdermabrasion systems use tiny crystal particles to exfoliate skin. Home microdermabrasion is every bit as effective at producing the results that customers would pay significantly higher prices to achieve in a professional spa or doctor’s office.

As with any other product, consumers need to do some research to determine the system that will work best for them. But I have been extremely pleased with the results I have been able to achieve with a system that costs me hundreds less per treatment, and can be used from the comfort of my own home. There are enough other procedures I still need to see my specialists for, so I choose to save money on the home products that work very well for me.

The Secret to an Inexpensive Home Microdermabrasion System:
Check my microdermabrasion web site to find out more.

Do Skin Tightening Creams Work? The #1 Problem With Most Skin Firming Creams

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Do skin tightening creams work or are they just a waste of time and money? To be honest, most of them will not do much for you and your skin. The only ones that actually work are those that are designed a specific way. This article will explain how to locate these type of treatments.

If you hypothetically already knew which type of skin tightening treatments worked- everything from topical products to drastic medical procedures- you would notice that they all do one key thing. Without doing this, it’s pretty much impossible to tighten your skin and make it more firm and elastic.

What is this one thing? In order to tighten up loose ans sagging skin, you must stimulate more collagen protein production. Collagen is the structural protein in your skin that determines how firm, tight, and flexible your skin is. Your body cannot produce as much of this protein as it could when you were younger, which explains why it becomes much easier as you get older for wrinkles, sagging skin, and other aging signs to form.

Do Skin Tightening Creams Work?

The only skin tightening creams that actually work contain ingredients that STIMULATE collagen production. I can’t stress the word stimulate enough because there are many products out there that actually contain collagen protein as an ingredient.

What’s wrong with these kind of skin tightening creams? Well most people don’t know this (thanks to the misdirection by most skin care companies), but collagen protein is too large to actually penetrate through your skin. So in reality, these products just leave collagen molecules lying on your skin until they are washed off after you bathe or shower!

Instead, use products that contain collagen-STIMULATING ingredients like CynergyTK™. This is a breakthrough ingredient that actually makes this possible. Up until recently, there has not been a legitimate way to stimulate collagen production naturally, which explains why more drastic procedures like laser skin tightening have been developed.

You can learn all about CynergyTK™ and the best skin tightening creams that contain this collagen-stimulating ingredient by visiting my website listed below. Caroline Richie is a long time user and passionate admirer of natural skin care. Visit her site now and discover the cutting-edge ingredients and anti aging solutions she recommends and uses after years of research and trial-and-error with all sorts of products Go to http://www.skin-and-health-site.com

Cosmetics Are Basically Nothing More Than Money Magnets

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Are we gullible, naive or downright stupid? Of course we don’t like to think we are, yet the powers that be surely think otherwise, and to add weight to the title of this article, we just have to look a the profits that are shovelled into the banks accounts of the large cosmetic companies month in, month out, year after year.

The last time you bought a particular skin cream for yourself, for example, you probably bought it for one of the following reasons:

  • You saw it advertised on TV or in a magazine
  • You were advised by a helpful sales assistant who convinced you that the particular cream was a good choice for your skin
  • You just happened to need a new cream
  • Some other reason

The reason doesn’t really matter, you bought it and were obviously satisfied with your choice, and if it was a top end brand, then you rest assured that the quality of your expensive purchase is definitely reflected in the price. Well ladies, and guys that buy cosmetic gifts for their loved ones, it is time to take a step back, take a deep breath and take charge of the situation and hold your purse strings tight, or hang onto your wallets as the case may be.

Cosmetics is big business and the main aim is to make a profit, and people behind the corporate doors of any leading cosmetic company know exactly how to manipulate the unsuspecting customers and thereby secure themselves high scale salaries and corporate profits.

This is not a vendetta against the cosmetic manufacturers, but a wake up call to anyone and everyone who really needs to turn every dollar, especially when our money is better spent elsewhere. The advertising ploys, the apparent claims, (the emphasis being on the word “apparent”), and the beautiful women, mainly well known models, film stars and other celebrities and the glossy advertising posters have a hidden agenda. The agenda is to stop us reading the label. If we read the label, we would probably be shocked at the high price we are expected to pay for something that simply doesn’t work.

The labels on most brands of cosmetics are a confusing maze of facts that create impressions. There are words that are frequently used within the cosmetic world that have certain meanings, and there are others that have a have a somewhat magical effect and they sound great, but in reality they mean absolutely nothing.
Words that are imported from, or borrowed from “dermatology” like epidermal or non-comedogenic are used to insinuate that a product is a proven and tested product and that it possibly has been subjected to and complies with the laws of a governing body. This is so NOT the case!

There are literally hundreds upon hundreds of different terms that are used and it is impossible to name every single one, but here is a good example: Non-comedogenic is often used when describing sun screen lotions and creams and moisturisers for people that suffer with acne. The cosmetic definition here is that the product will not cause more spots, zits or pimples than a person normally has or would have. The term is often used in connection with the term “oil free”.

However, the experts inform us that after expensive testing where pimples are actually counted before and after a product is tested, and after a period of 1 to 2 weeks there are no new zits, then manufactures are legally free to make the claim. It is brought to the attention of people that do the research, that there are companies who use these kinds of terminologies without doing any testing, based on others results, and they use products that are known not to block the pores of the skin.

However, most cosmetic companies are operating within the law, even though at times they do appear to be walking a very fine line between truth and fiction. It isn’t possible for us ordinary mortals to understand everything that is on a label, even if we do read it – but if you are in doubt, don’t buy a product.

As with buying anything else we purchase these days, check online, and read up on the terminologies that the cosmetic companies use and if that is too much too ask, then one sure way to find out if a product works and it does what it claims to do is to buy it.

Suzi Carr also writes about her various topics and you are invited to visit her websites that discuss men’s thongs and ladies underwear.