Inge van Lotringen The four midlife beauty habits you MUST break
Better...not younger
In the glamorous world of beauty, it’s hard to fathom that anything more sinister than the odd face rash from an unexpectedly potent skin potion can befall us.
It’s all just paint and powder, isn’t it? As for treatments and gadgets, as long as they’re labelled ‘beauty’, you can indulge with impunity. they’re hardly medical procedures after all, how harmful can they be?
More harmful than you might imagine is the answer. We’ve all seen what can happen if we let a nonqualified therapist loose with acids, lasers or injectables. But regular cosmetics can be problematic too, if you use them too enthusiastically or in the wrong way. So here are some last-minute new Year resolutions for you in the shape of the beauty habits you would do well to ditch.
Overdosing on hair strengtheners
the success of Olaplex, the original ‘bond-building’ serum capable of patching up hair damage and breakage due to over-processing strands with bleach and dyes, has inspired a tidal wave of bond-repairing and hair-restoring products such as K18 Repair Mask, Living Proof triple Bond Complex and new L’Oreal elvive Bond Repair.
Colourist Jodie Shirley, of London’s nicola Clarke at John Frieda salon, says she has seen remarkable results from the £65 Virtue Restorative treatment Mask. But there is an issue, she says. ‘If you use products that replace lost keratin [hair’s building blocks] more often than advised, you can tip the scales and make it go brittle.
‘With so many hair strengthening products on the market now, it’s easy to get too much of a good thing.’ So, she advises if you already use a weekly bond-building serum or keratin mask, make sure all your other products are ‘regular’.
At-home microneedling
tAKIng to your skin with a microneedling roller similar to the ones used by professionals seems a smart, low- cost alternative to get the same results.
But good lord, please don’t. ‘A course of professional microneedling is brilliant if you need it, but needling shouldn’t be part of your weekly or even monthly regime,’ says skin doctor Sophie Shotter — in unison with just about every skin specialist I know.
Do it on a regular basis and your skin will just suffer damage. Apart from that, rollers when held the
wrong way will tear into your flesh rather than making neat puncture points. Also, we rarely sterilise these rollers, risking infection.
Converting to face soap
gOOD old soap has made a comeback in recent years, thanks to heightened handwashing and it being environmentally friendly in terms of packaging.
Lots of special ‘face soaps’ are also doing the rounds, all claiming to be less harsh than regular soap by being ‘all natural’.
But watch out. Regular soaps are made of oils and fats and lye ( sodium hydroxide), which is quite a skin- stripping ingredient.
Very little lye is left in the final product, but it’s enough to make soap alkaline, which means it’s very drying. Any bar with the words sodium or potassium ***-ate in its ingredients, such as ‘sodium olivate’, is not great as a face wash.
the ‘face soaps’ you want are often called ‘face bars’ or ‘syndets’, and are made of mild synthetic detergents such as disodium lauryl sulfosuccinate or coco glucoside, just like liquid face washes. the £8 Cerave hydrating Cleanser Bar is a good example.
Using lash-boosting serums all year
It’S hard to resist the dramatically lengthening effects of lashboosting serums that contain prostaglandin analogues — hormone-like substances proven to boost lash growth.
they work, but you must never use them all the time and only as directed, says ophthalmologist and eye surgeon Dr Rachna Murthy. If you overdo it, you risk ‘hyperpigmentation, inflammation and redness of the eye line and lid,’ she says.
‘the additional lash growth can also harbour more bacteria. this can [lead] to dry eye disease.’
Anything else? ‘With continued use, we also see . . . decreased lower eye socket fat pads and a sunken eye appearance.’ Lovely. Just stick to a short course once a year.