Since you shed roughly 50,000 skin cells every 60 seconds and grow a whole new outer layer every 28 days without effort, it's clear that your skin is an organ of elimination and regeneration. Unfortunately, as time marches on, it tends to do so across your face, while stamping a few more creases on your birthday suit as evidence of each passing year. But with a little TLC, you can keep your outer crust from becoming crusty. In addition to a healthy diet and lifestyle, the occasional use of a skin scrub will exfoliate dead cells and stimulate cell turnover – and result in a glowing new you.
Face and body scrubs consist of various raw materials. Sugar and salt are the most common base ingredients, mostly because they’re usually on hand. Because sugar and salt are available in varying degrees of coarseness, the texture of the finished product is controlled by the type used. Granulated or brown sugar, for example, have a much smaller particle size than raw cane (turbinado) sugar. Similarly, there’s quite a difference in granularity between fine table salt and sea salt.
There are plenty of other base ingredients that are suitable for face and body scrubs that are likely found in your kitchen or pantry as well. These include cocoa powder, oat flakes and the same ground coffee that produced your morning cup of java. In the botanical department, dried rose petals, calendula flowers, lavender buds and orange peel bits are excellent partners to invite to the party.
No comments:
Post a Comment