A Metamucil tablet and a coat of Vaseline could keep your skin dewy and fresh. Who knew?
And the dry skin award goes too ...
Kiehl’s impressive arsenal of winter skin products won our office road test. From their incredibly effective, yet unbelievably lightweight Ultra Facial Cream ($25) to the office-friendly Unusually Rich But Not Greasy At All Hand Cream ($16), we felt as hydrated as if we’d taken a bath in baby oil and then feel asleep in a sauna. www.kiehls.com
Hard times and harsh weather do not a clear complexion make. To save you from three cold months of chafed noses and crusty eyebrows, we enlisted celebrity dermatologist Dr. David Colbert and makeup artist Talia Shobrook to address a list of winter skin ills with budget-friendly tips.
Those cold and flu-induced dry nose patches It’s one thing to have a constant runny nose in elementary school, another as a working adult. Those crusty flakes of skin around your nose won’t exactly impress on a job interview. “The problem is that when you constantly blow your nose, the friction irritates the skin. The trick is to coat your nose with a thin layer of Vaseline to form a protective shield from the tissue,” says Dr. Colbert who helps loyal clients including Cate Blanchett, Naomi Campbell and Rachel Weisz look spot-free. “I would also use an eye cream on the nose at night before bed,” adds Shobrook whose clients include Kate Bosworth, Sarah Jessica Parker and Mischa Barton.
Eye dandruff The idea of dry flaky skin around the eyes and eyebrows sounds weird (and gross), but it’s a more common occurrence than you think. Example: You have acne-prone skin and the cold weather and nightly Retin-A applications have caused flakes in sensitive areas. “The cure for ‘eye dandruff’ is a really good eye cream or gel. A cream is good for people who generally have dry skin around the eye area. Eyecon by Benefit cosmetics will smooth the delicate skin around the eye,” says Shobrook.
Scaly face “People don’t realize that sugar is really bad for maintaining moisture in the skin,” says Dr. Colbert before going on to explain that the body uses more water to metabolize a pack of M&Ms than an apple. So basically, a diet loaded with refined sugars = accelerated aging. “You are what you eat,” adds Dr. Colbert. The solution? A Metamucil tablet a day (seriously.) “I tell my patients to take a tablet a day because it helps get the digestive tract moving the way it needs to and helps the body hold water. When your digestive tract is working properly, your skin retains more moisture. And when that happens, the aging process slows down.”