Winter Skin Alert: Are You Wearing Sunscreen?

Makeuptalk.com forums

Help Support Makeuptalk.com forums:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Sep 12, 2005
Messages
2,657
Reaction score
0
It's cold in winter, so you don't need sunscreen, right? Wrong. Actually, you need it more. In the winter, the sun is closer to the earth and its rays are even stronger. Although it's true that you're outside for less time and are more bundled up when you are, your face and hands are still exposed to harmful rays. The unfortunate message from dermatologists everywhere is that if you don't wear sunscreen year-round, you are more vulnerable to getting brown spots, fine lines and wrinkles on your hands and face. To minimize such damage, experts say to use a product with an SPF of at least 15.

Here are some more tips to improve your sunscreen savvy this season:

Choose a sunscreen that protects you from UVA and UVB rays. There are two kinds of ultraviolet rays that reach the earth's surface: ultraviolet A (UVA) and ultraviolet B (UVB). Both UVA and UVB rays cause your skin to show signs of sunburn and age, but many sunscreens only protect you from UVB rays. Make sure the sunscreen you buy contains ingredients that protect you from both. (The ingredient Parsol 1789, for example, filters out A and B.)

Wear it, wear it, wear it ‑- indoors and out.Okay, so you bought the sunscreen. That's not good enough. Even if you're inside, ultraviolet exposure can occur through windows and cause skin problems over the years. Many people have extra sun damage on the left side of the face because of sun exposure through the driver's-side car window, notes Dr. Barbara Reed, a dermatologist in Denver. Even at your sunny office desk, you could be absorbing harmful radiation.

Begin with a product you love. You may have to pay a little more for a sunscreen that's formulated for your face. It's worth it. These products are usually noncomedogenic, so they won't clog pores; they're lightweight and absorb quickly. Remember, the nicer the product, the more likely you are to use it.

If you plan to play in the snow... keep in mind that you face increased exposure to ultraviolet rays. Snow reflects about 80 percent of the ultraviolet light that hits it. Compounding the problem, for every 1,000 feet of elevation, ultraviolet exposure increases about 2 percent. So if you're out skiing, skating, mountain climbing or sledding, you need at least an SPF 30 to protect against the added exposure. According to Face Works Day Spa owner Susie Galvez, a day on the slopes calls for a heavy oil-based moisturizer and sunscreen ‑- even if you have oily skin. "You need to keep skin hydrated and create a barrier between your skin and the elements," she explains. And watch out for water-based foundations, she notes. In freezing temperatures, they can actually freeze on your face and cause redness and irritation.

When you fly, slather it on. If you're traveling this winter, don't forget to carry a small bottle of sunscreen with you. Your SPF may be in your suitcase on its way to an island paradise, but where you really need it is on the plane. The higher you are in the sky, the more UV radiation you're exposed to. That means the more potential you have for skin damage. Apply a sunscreen of SPF 30 all over your face before leaving the gate

 
I never knew I needed sunscreen on the plane??????? Thanks for info.

 
Definitely wear HIGH SPF sunscreen when you ski! I forgot one time, and i got a pretty bad burn, plus goggle lines, so it was not cute.

I wear a SPF 45, I believe (Its called Solarsense or something like that)

 
Oh yes definitely!

There's never a day without sunscreen in my life ever since I was a kid. No one told me about sunscreen before, I just figured it out myself because my skin tan really fast and it hurt. So I had to find something to protect my skin.

 
Well it's too damn cold for me to even GO outside so I don't think I have to worry about the sunscreen unless it is comin in through my blinds!!!:icon_bigg

 
yeah, uva in the winter are really strong. and they are the ones that cause aging.

good thing to know is that Parsol is called avobenzone also. look for it in the active ingridients table, this filter gives better UVA protection than other ones.

 
but there is a lot more than that. the reason you must wear sunscreen is to protect from UVA, and only 3 things (in the US, anyway) can protect against UVA rays--zinc oxide, titanium dioxide, or avobenzone. you need at least 2% of each.

but there's more--avobenzone is unstable, so you need at least half as much octocrylene. so 2% avobenzone needs at least 1% octocrylene. PLUS you can not have octyl met-something (can't remember spelling) OR octinaxate (they are the same, different names)

UVA comes through clouds, windows...everything. so wear EVERY DAY all day.

hope this info helps, girls!

 
very interesting. but titanium dioxide and zinc oxide aren't stable either, are they?

mexoryl seems to be the best one, too bad they didn't approve it in the US yet.

today I bought Purpose cream spf 30. it has:

Ensulizole 2.0%, Octinoxate 7.5%, Octocrylene 7.5%, Zinc Oxide 2.0%

what do you think? for me, it doesn't seem like excellent protection...

 
i either have heard or read before about wearing suncreen whenever outside, even in winter, so i wear it everyday, sometimes it seems like, its snowing i don't need to, but i got used to it, its my usual daily moisturizer with SPF in it.

 
um, I think zinc oxide and titanium dioxide are stable. purpose's doesn't seem to have that great of UVA protection (i like to see at least 4% zinc or titanium), but it's enough...

 
Yebb, I had my moles removed recently by a plastic surgeon. And after that he was like "wear sunscreen and wear sunscreen, and yes oh wear sunscreen, always wear suncreen sunscreen sunscreen sunscreen". So now when I hear sunscreen, or when I use it even, I think about that doctor :icon_eek: .

 
Thanx for posting, alot of people think of sunscreen as a summer thing, and alot of black women are like 'we don't need it!', but everyone does, I am guilty of not using it though even though I know better.:icon_redf

 
YAY FOR SUNSCREEN!

I wear it all year round, Spf 30 in the winter and Spf 60 in summer. I have very fair skin and once I rode my horse for an hour in the winter with out sunscreen and I got burnt!

I'm a sunscreen fanatic, but I didn't know you had to wear it in a plane :S just as well I've always sat in an isle seat, not the window seat:icon_smil

Apparently computers and fluroescent light give off UV rays as well?!

 
I really don't spend much time outside in the winter and the sun rarely shows up these days... but my mousturizer has SPF 15

 
I wear sunscreen year round. I like Olay complete defense sensitive skin spf 30. It sinks right in and isn't greasy. It has zinc oxide in it.

 
i never ever ever wear sunscreen! im a dumb ass! in the summer i wear number 4 sunscreen so i can have a nice tan:icon_chee

 

Latest posts

Back
Top