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Thursday, November 24, 2011

SKIN CARE FOR DIFFERENT SKIN TYPES:::Combination Skin, Causes And Treatment

Combination skin unlike dry skin and oily skin occurs when two or more different skin types occur on your face at the same time. Typically, combination skin is when some parts of your face are dry or flaky, while the center part of your face, nose, chin, and forehead (called the T-zone) is oily. Combination skin can also describe conditions where wrinkles and breakouts or rosacea and dry skin are present at the same time.

  • What Causes Combination Skin?
A variety of factors contribute to combination skin—sometimes it is just genetics. When it comes to combination skin, the causes and combinations are a little bit different for everyone.
Generally, the areas around the nose, chin, and forehead have more active oil glands than other parts of the face. Some people have rosacea and dry skin and others have blemish-prone, flaky, inflamed skin. Another common cause of combination skin can be a result of the very skin-care products you are using. For example, if you are using products that contain irritating ingredients, they can stimulate oil production in the T-zone area and at the same time create more dry skin and redness on the rest of the face.
You may also be using moisturizers that are too emollient, making your skin feel oilier and clogging up pores. All the products you use have to be appropriate for the different skin types you are experiencing—even if that means using different products on different parts of your face.

  • What Products Work for Combination Skin? 
Basically, those with combination skin need products that don't make matters worse. It is critical to only use well-formulated products designed for the mix of skin types you're dealing with.
In some cases that can mean using different products on different parts of your face. For example, you may need lighter-weight gels, liquids, or oil-absorbing products for your T-zone and lotions or creams for the drier parts of your face. Or it could mean using an acne treatment over areas where you breakout and moisturizers only over drier areas, including around the eyes.

Many people will find that their combination skin becomes more balanced when they stop using products that are either wrong for their skin type (too emollient for the T-zone or too absorbent for the dry areas) or contain problem ingredients that are causing their skin more harm than good. Whatever your skin needs, Beautypedia.com can help you find the right products recommended by The Paula's Choice Team.
  • How to Take Care of Your Combination Skin
  • Start with a gentle cleanser:
  • Always wash your face with a gentle, water-soluble cleanser to prevent irritation and dryness. If you have oily and dry combination skin, a gel-based or mild foaming cleanser will be perfect. If you have dry skin and rosacea with sun damage, a lightweight lotion cleanser is ideal. Regardless of the texture it must always be gentle! Paula's Choice cleansers never contain any irritants or fragrance and are a great first step towards controlling combination skin.
  • Avoid bar soaps or bar cleansers of any kind, regardless of their claims. The ingredients that put bar cleansers in their bar form can clog pores and are always too drying and irritating for any skin type.
  •    Use a toner to repair skin:
  • If you use a toner, it must not contain any irritants whatsoever that includes alcohol, witch hazel, menthol, fragrance (synthetic or natural), or citrus oils—all of which frequently show up in toner formulas! Only use toners that are filled with a healthy dose of skin-repairing ingredients such as skin-identical ingredients, antioxidants, and cell-communicating ingredients.
  •   Protect from sun damage: Sunscreen must be used every day, year-round if you want to prevent and stop wrinkles and other signs of aging skin! If you have oily skin prone to breakouts, your foundation and pressed powder can provide the sun protection you need. If you have sensitive skin and rosacea, choose sunscreens with only titanium dioxide or/and zinc oxide as the active ingredients.
  •    Exfoliate to remove built-up skin cells: With regular use of a beta hydroxy acid (BHA/salicylic acid) or alpha hydroxy acid (AHAs, such as glycolic acid) product in a texture appropriate for your skin type (gel or liquid for oily, blemish-prone skin, or lotion for normal or dry skin), you will uncover the normal, healthy skin hiding underneath. Paula's Choice exfoliants come in a variety of textures and concentrations to handle whatever combination of skin types you're struggling with. BHA is especially helpful for normal, oily or blemish-prone skin because it not only exfoliates the surface of skin, it also exfoliates inside the pore to reduce pore size, unclog pores, and kill acne-causing bacteria. BHA is also a must for anyone struggling with blackheads and enlarged pores!
  •   Special concerns require special products: If you are prone to blemishes, besides using a BHA exfoliant, applying a product with benzoyl peroxide will target and kill acne-causing bacteria. For mild to moderate acne begin with a 2.5% strength and then depending on how your skin does, you can increase to a 5% strength. Paula's Choice CLEAR Anti-Acne system is a great option.
  •    Spot-treat the different skin types on your face: Apply moisturizers in lotion or cream form to dry areas.
  • If you have oily and dry skin apply a matte finish foundation, but apply a hydrating primer/serum to the dry areas first.
  • If your eye area is the driest part of your face, then you can use a rich, creamy moisturizer or serum around that area of your face. For the less-dry areas of your face, you can use a lotion-textured moisturizer, and for the oily areas your toner will be enough to keep skin healthy in those areas. Of course, all of these must be well-formulated—and all Paula's Choice toners are!
  • Be sure to avoid getting lotion and cream moisturizers on the oily parts of your face because it will absolutely make them look and feel greasier.
  •    Choose only the best products: Purchase products loaded with antioxidants, cell-communicating ingredients, emollients, and ingredients that mimic the structure and function of healthy skin. (Learn more about how to choose products here. 
  • Make sure products are packaged in an opaque, airtight container (no jars) to keep the antioxidants and other air-sensitive ingredients stable and bacteria-free.
  • For many skin types, if the products you use are well formulated you may find lighter-weight serums, lotions, or gels may be all your skin needs to look and feel radiant, smooth, and younger.
  • If you have very dry skin in some areas and dry skin in others, then an antioxidant-rich serum paired with an emollient moisturizer will work great.

Credit: The Paula's Choice Team

4 comments:

  1. This is really a good resource about how to do some extra care in managing your combination skin problems. I can say, that having this kind of problem is really not an easy way to deal. So better make sure to avoid this kind of skin imperfections. I must say prevention is better than cure.

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  2. It is very difficult to take care of combination of skin, because it needs different types of skin care product. I do agree with you for the use of anti oxidants, and use of moisturizer and other skin care product which make the skin oily. You have given the good tips to take care of combinationof skin.

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  3. i like you blog. i think it is very cool. how i wish people can see through to care for their skin.

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