Scottish Daily Mail

Make your hands look younger without surgery!

From waving them in the air to wearing gloves in bed ...

- By Alice Hart-davis

HOWeVeR much we slather our f aces in serums, eye creams, night creams and moisturise­r, there is one part of the body that will always betray our age: our hands.

Last week, a survey suggested that ageing hands are one of our biggest beauty worries, with one in eight of us being more concerned about the condition of our mitts than our face.

As the years pass, skin on the hands thins, causing veins to become more prominent and liver spots to appear. While make-up can disguise tell-tale signs of ageing on the face, it’s more difficult with hands — which is why it’s often said that hands are the best indicator of age. even Madonna, pictured right, who has ‘anti-aged’ almost every part of her body, resorts to fingerless gloves to cover hers.

But without injections of fat, fillers or laser treatment to remove age spots, how can you knock a few years off your hands? here are some simple yet effective ideas.

Banish blotches

AS We get older, the cells within the skin that make melanin (the brown pigment that gives us a tan) cluster together into visible marks known as liver or age spots. how many of these appear depends on how much exposure to sunlight our hands have had over a lifetime, but they can be softened without resorting to expensive laser treatment. Nivea’s Q10 Plus Age Defying hand Cream (£2.83) promises to reduce excess pigmentati­on, while Clinique’s even Better Clinical Dark Spot Correcting hand Cream (£22.50) has been clinically shown to reduce dark marks as effectivel­y as the prescripti­on product hydroquino­ne.

You can even achieve the effects of a chemical skin peel by using Chrono Reverser gel (£47.50, the-comfort-zone. co.uk). This contains polyhydrox­y acids which mimic the effects of a chemical peel, leaving skin smoother and firmer. If used nightly for four weeks, it promises to fade age spots as well as fine lines.

Slather on an SPF

eXCePT when they are in gloves, our hands are continuall­y exposed to the elements. Sun damage causes up to 80 per cent of the visible signs of ageing, and loss of firmness, roughness and age spots are all a direct result of how many UV rays our hands have picked up. Wearing sunscreen, or a hand cream containing both UVA and UVB filters, prevents f uture damage.

It doesn’t have to be expensive — Superdrug’s Solait SPF30 sunscreen costs £2.48 and Neutrogena Norwegian Formula AntiAgeing hand Cream now contains SPF25 (£4.09, at Boots). Tinted face products work on hands too, and can disguise any redness around the knuckles. Sarah McNamara’s Miracle Skin Transforme­r (£38 at Selfridges.com) is a tinted multi-tasker that not only smoothes and evens out skin tone but contains an SPF 20.

Nail it

The surface of your nails can become roughened, dull and discoloure­d over the years, so giving them a little TLC can have antiageing benefits. Nail care doesn’t have to be elaborate. ‘The paredback manicure is a key look this summer,’ says celebrity nail technician Marian Newman. ‘Focus on creating a perfect short, curved shape for the nails, then use a quality buffer to bring out their natural shine.’ Leighton Denny’s Large Crystal Nail File (£15.50, Boots) is a long-lasting investment, as is Models Own 4-way Buffer Block (£3.50, Boots).

Dare to go bare

NAIL c ol our t hat is garishly bright can draw unwanted attention to the hands.

Play it safe with a nude varnish, t hi s s ummer’s most fashionabl­e shade, for what Revlon calls the ‘mannequin hands’ look, where y o ur nails are almost the same colour as your fingers, creating t he effect of long, elegant fingers (Revlon has eight nude shades to choose from, £7.99 at Boots and Superdrug).

Hands up!

ADOPT the time-honoured debutante’s trick for achieving beautiful hands. They used to hold their hands in the air while being driven to a fancy party. Why? So that by the time they arrived, the blood had drained down from their hands, which would be fashionabl­y cool and pale for when they had shake their hostess’s hand. It also makes bulging veins look temporaril­y less prominent.

Rub it in

ANTI-AgeINg creams for hands do exist! Dermaquest has a glyco hand Cream (£42, houseoffra­ser. co.uk) which contains 15 per cent glycolic acid to help speed up cell turnover and leave skin smooth and soft. The peptides popular in f ace creams can also be found in hand lotions such as Renouve (£22 from victoriahe­alth. com), an alcohol-free ‘antiageing hand sanitising lotion’ . The crème de la handcrème has to be La Prairie’s White Caviar Illuminati­ng hand Cream SPF 15 (£93, Selfridges. com). Ingredient­s include an exfoliatin­g peptide, rich conditione­rs and SPF 15.

Little things count

RAggeD cuticles make hands look unkempt and older. Soak them in warm water to soften them, then ease the cuticle back using a wooden orange stick, and rub in cuticle oil every night.

If you can’t stand getting your fingers oily, try Margaret Dabbs Nourishing Nail and Cuticle Serum (£10, margaretda­bbs.co.uk) or a cuticle pen such as Rituals Cuticle Treatment Pen (£7.50, rituals.com and John Lewis.

Diet is everything

eATINg well gives nails and skin a boost. Make sure your diet includes plenty of protein in the form of fish, eggs, lean meat and cheese. Packing in colourful vegetables will strengthen skin, too, and the antioxidan­ts they contain i mprove its ability to stand up to sunshine and pollution.

Research by Dr Mark Birch-Machin, professor of molecular dermatolog­y at Newcastle University, has found that a diet rich in tomatoes increases the skin’s ability to protect itself, thanks to the antioxidan­t lycopene that they contain (it’s the pigment which gives t omatoes t heir colour).

Other beneficial antioxidan­ts include carotene, found in carrots, and anthocyani­ns, which give blueberrie­s their colour.

Pop a pill

IF YOUR diet isn’t providing the right nutrients, you can take supplement­s to strengthen nails and thicken skin. Studies have indicated that Imedeen Time Perfection tablets (£35, imedeen.co.uk) improve the density of ageing skin by 122 per cent, while evelle (£35.95 from multivits.co.uk)claims to have a unique formula to support skin, nails and hair.

Don’t get in a lather

IF YOUR job involves lots of hand-washing, it’s even more important to use a protective cream. Paediatric nurse Antonia Steven has created a remarkably good cream called ‘Yes Nurse’ (£5.49, yesnurse.co.uk).

Another cracker of a thick, protective cream is Farmers’ hand Cream (£12.95, welshlaven­der.co. uk), while Lanolips Rose Balm Intense for Very Dry hands and Nails (£8.99, victoriahe­alth.com) is based on medical-grade lanolin.

Hand in glove

USINg hand-treatment products overnight in conjunctio­n with cotton gloves is a short cut to betterlook­ing hands — the build-up of heat helps lotions to penetrate.

Facialist Sarah Chapman has created the gorgeous new Overnight hand & Nail Treatment (£35 including gloves, spacenk. com), while Bliss glamour gloves (£36.50, blissworld.co.uk) have a self-activating, moisturisi­ng gel lining impregnate­d with vitamin e, olive and grapeseed oils. Wear them for 20 minutes at a time to soften, hydrate and smooth.

There is even a ‘face-mask’ for hands, the Sanctuary Anti-Ageing Intensive hand Mask (£5.10 at Boots). Massage it in last thing at night, then pull on the gloves that come with it to help the product soften your skin overnight.

 ??  ?? Pointing the finger: Madonna’s hands reveal her age
Pointing the finger: Madonna’s hands reveal her age

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